Professor Nicola Yelland Importance of Play Interview


Professor Nicola Yelland Importance of Play Interview

The Importance of Play in the Lives of Young Children

In early childhood education, play has characteristically been regarded as the main way that young children learn. There are many forms of play including, block play, symbolic play, water play, and so on, each with their specific definitions and association with various different types of materials and activities. There are also other kinds, like 'pretend' play, which encapsulates dressing up, taking on a different persona, and creating dramatic scenarios in which the young child enacts actions that s/he has observed in some aspect of their lives. This might also be called dramatic play, role play, or socio-dramatic play, if other children are included in the scenarios.

In pretend play, the young child is not just taking on the 'role' of the character that they are playing with, or enacting. For them, they 'are' that person, animal or object, and the scenes that they create and perform, are a window into the ways in which they are interpreting the world, and how they are making meaning about the behaviours, actions and ideas that they experience. This is why it is important for young children to experience pretend play. In enacting these scenarios, we realise that pretend play creates learning contexts that are rich and varied. They help children to explore the experiences of others and in doing so, enables them to understand their own identities, and how they 'fit' into the world. They do this in a context of their own meaning making where they can engage in risk taking, planning, creating fantasies and examining 'real world' scenarios.

The catalysts for these scenarios and their relevance to young children's lives will come from many, and varied, sources. What is different about learning in the 21st century is that it is multimodal. That is, children have opportunities to learn via all their senses in visual, aural, oral and kinaesthetic modalities, or other forms, including the use of new technologies. They will see and hear things that happen in their everyday lives, in the car, garden, or while shopping with their parents. They will also have access to toys, natural and man-made materials, books, TV, Apps, and other media which enable them not only to experience familiar things and events, but also expose them to amazing and fantastic stories from creative minds that explore the potential of things that might not be possible in everyday life. They will also have opportunities to express their ideas in these modalities; in plays, drawings, using music and movement and a range of other ways. The more varied the experiences, the greater the understandings they will acquire, as well as the possibilities of meaning making for deep learning to occur.

In creating contexts to support young children's learning, educators are very aware that they need to have opportunities for the children to playfully explore in a wide variety of contexts with as many materials as they want to include. Teachers will enable young children to creatively and critically explore in rich and varied learning environments so that they are able to develop their own ideas, connect ideas and design their own strategies for action. Teachers often share the ways in which they do this with parents since they can use the strategies in their own interactions with their children.

The new focus for Peppa Pig 'When I Grow Up' programs has the potential to be a rich source of learning for young children. They already resonate with the character, her family and friends and will relate to the scenarios about roles and responsibilities that different citizens in our communities have. Children love watching Peppa and her friends in their various adventures and if they are able to see Peppa and her friends envisioning their future lives as farmers, fire personnel, doctors and various other professions they will be able to explore and experiment with these roles in embodied contexts that characterise pretend play. Additionally, with other toys and materials they will be able to extend this play into different modalities to creatively deepen their learning understandings about the world.

In addition, educators and parents will interact with the children as they are playing and engage them in conversations to extend their vocabulary, challenge their thinking and stimulate their curiosity. Such experiences constitute playful explorations in which the child is able to experiment with any ideas or materials that they want to and extend their play into the different dimensions with different materials and modalities. They are essential to healthy and creative childhoods and as educators and parents we strive to support this type of deep learning in contemporary times.

Interview with Nicola Yelland, Professor of Early Childhood Studies at Flinders University

Nicola Yelland is the Professor of Early Childhood Studies in the College of Education, Psychology and Social Work at Flinders University in Adelaide, South Australia. Her teaching and research interests have been related to the use of new technologies in school and community contexts. She has also worked in East Asia and examined the culture and curriculum of early childhood settings. Nicola's work engages with educational issues with regard to varying social, economic and political conditions and thus requires multidisciplinary perspectives. Recent publications include; Reimagining play with new technologies. In L. Arnott (Ed.) Digital technologies and learning in the early years.

(London, UK: SAGE) and Yelland, N.J. & Leung, W.M. Policy into practice in Hong Kong pre-primary kindergartens: the impact of a reform agenda viewing early childhood as the foundation for lifelong learning. International Journal of Early Years. She is the editor of a new edited collection with Dana Franz-Bentley; Found in translation: Connecting reconceptualist thinking with contemporary early childhood practices. (New York: Routledge). Nicola is the founding co-editor of two journals Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood and Global Studies of Childhood and the Series Editor of Changing Images of Early Childhood with Routledge (New York).


Question: When you were younger, what did you want to be 'when you grew up'?

Professor Nicola Yelland: A ballet dancer or a fairy. I did ballet and loved it. With hindsight, it was not possible as I was not small boned and was rather heavy footed!


Question: How does pretend play help the development of young children?

Professor Nicola Yelland: 'Pretend' play includes activities like dressing up and taking on a different character's traits & creating dramatic scenarios. In doing this the young child enacts actions that s/he has observed in some aspect of their lives.

In pretend play, the young child is not just taking on the 'role' of the character that they are playing with, or enacting. For them, they 'are' that person, animal or object, and the scenes that they create and perform, are a window into the ways in which they are interpreting the world, and how they are making meaning about the behaviours, actions and ideas that they experience. This is why it is important for young children to experience pretend play. In enacting these scenarios, we realise that pretend play creates learning contexts that are rich and varied. They help children to explore the experiences of others and in doing so, enables them to understand their own identities, and how they 'fit' into the world. They do this in a context of their own meaning making where they can engage in risk taking, planning, creating fantasies and examining 'real world' scenarios.


Question: What ways can a parent encourage these insights from their children?

Professor Nicola Yelland: First there are the material things the toys, or props – these don't have to be commercial items but can also be made up of 'loose parts' or items that you can collect – natural materials like sticks, pine cones, acorns; cardboard items, ribbons; indeed anything.

Then there are the conversations - talking naturally with the children as they're in the role and asking questions about what they are doing and what they might do next? And listening!


Question: Why are the Peppa Pig 'When I Grow Up' programs educationally beneficial to young children?

Professor Nicola Yelland: The new focus for Peppa Pig 'When I Grow Up' programs has the potential to be a rich source of learning for young children. They already resonate with the character, her family and friends and will relate to the scenarios about roles and responsibilities that different citizens in our communities have.

Children love watching Peppa Pig and her friends in their various adventures and if they are able to see Peppa Pig and her friends envisioning their future lives as farmers, fire personnel, doctors and various other professions they will be able to explore and experiment with these roles in embodied contexts that characterise pretend play. Additionally, with other toys and materials they will be able to extend this play into different modalities to creatively deepen their learning understandings about the world.


Interview by Brooke Hunter

 

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