Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive
Play is how children explore, discover, fail, succeed, socialize, and flourish. It is a fundamental element of the human condition. It's the key to giving schoolchildren skills they need to succeed-skills like creativity, innovation, teamwork, focus, resilience, expressiveness, empathy, concentration, and executive function. Expert organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Centers for Disease Control agree that play and physical activity are critical foundations of childhood, academics, and future skills-yet politicians are destroying play in childhood education and replacing it with standardization, stress, and forcible physical restraint, which are damaging to learning and corrosive to society.



But this is not the case for hundreds of thousands of lucky children who are enjoying the power of play in schools in China, Texas, Oklahoma, Long Island, Scotland, and in the entire nation of Finland. In Let the Children Play, Pasi Sahlberg, Finnish educator and scholar, and Fulbright Scholar William Doyle make the case for helping schools and children thrive by unleashing the power of play and giving more physical and intellectual play to all schoolchildren.
"1130963315"
Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive
Play is how children explore, discover, fail, succeed, socialize, and flourish. It is a fundamental element of the human condition. It's the key to giving schoolchildren skills they need to succeed-skills like creativity, innovation, teamwork, focus, resilience, expressiveness, empathy, concentration, and executive function. Expert organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Centers for Disease Control agree that play and physical activity are critical foundations of childhood, academics, and future skills-yet politicians are destroying play in childhood education and replacing it with standardization, stress, and forcible physical restraint, which are damaging to learning and corrosive to society.



But this is not the case for hundreds of thousands of lucky children who are enjoying the power of play in schools in China, Texas, Oklahoma, Long Island, Scotland, and in the entire nation of Finland. In Let the Children Play, Pasi Sahlberg, Finnish educator and scholar, and Fulbright Scholar William Doyle make the case for helping schools and children thrive by unleashing the power of play and giving more physical and intellectual play to all schoolchildren.
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Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive

Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive

by Pasi Sahlberg, William Doyle

Narrated by Randye Kaye

Unabridged — 11 hours, 44 minutes

Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive

Let the Children Play: How More Play Will Save Our Schools and Help Children Thrive

by Pasi Sahlberg, William Doyle

Narrated by Randye Kaye

Unabridged — 11 hours, 44 minutes

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Overview

Play is how children explore, discover, fail, succeed, socialize, and flourish. It is a fundamental element of the human condition. It's the key to giving schoolchildren skills they need to succeed-skills like creativity, innovation, teamwork, focus, resilience, expressiveness, empathy, concentration, and executive function. Expert organizations such as the American Academy of Pediatrics, the National Academy of Sciences, and the Centers for Disease Control agree that play and physical activity are critical foundations of childhood, academics, and future skills-yet politicians are destroying play in childhood education and replacing it with standardization, stress, and forcible physical restraint, which are damaging to learning and corrosive to society.



But this is not the case for hundreds of thousands of lucky children who are enjoying the power of play in schools in China, Texas, Oklahoma, Long Island, Scotland, and in the entire nation of Finland. In Let the Children Play, Pasi Sahlberg, Finnish educator and scholar, and Fulbright Scholar William Doyle make the case for helping schools and children thrive by unleashing the power of play and giving more physical and intellectual play to all schoolchildren.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

"The definitive account of how educational policy-makers, presumably well-intentioned, have gone completely astray, in the United States and elsewhere, along with a vivid and convincing account of how to restore play to its proper place in the lives of children." — Howard Gardner, Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education, Harvard Graduate School of Education

"Inspirational, well written, and superbly documented, this book is a gift to the next generation. Adding play back into children's hurried and stressed lives might just be the elixir that will help them thrive in a workforce of thinkers, innovators, and collaborators. Thank you Doyle and Sahlberg for giving us a road map so that we can put our educational systems back on course." — Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, Lefkowitz Faculty Fellow in Psychology at Temple University

"Sahlberg and Doyle whack us in the head with the reality that 21st Century skills require old-fashioned learning as children. Play is the analog of life - observing the world, identifying challenges, taking risks, failing, problem-solving again and again, struggling to find consensus with others, absorbing defeats with grace and celebrating victories with exuberance. What builds successful adults is the ability to rise undaunted to opportunities, build relationships, feed curiosity and seize the joy that is at the heart of learning and of living!" — Michael Rich, Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Harvard Medical School and author of Ask the Mediatrician

"Let the Children Play should be in the hands of every single teacher, parent and policy maker who touch the lives of the children they serve. Sahlberg and Doyle clearly articulate and demand that we wake up and finally acknowledge that children have the fundamental right to play in school. This is a compelling vision of the power of play and what we can do to ensure it comes off the 'endangered species' list and back into every school around the world." — Michael J. Hynes, Ed.D., Superintendent of Schools for the Patchogue-Medford School District in New York

"Let the Children Play is a passionate, eloquent and substantiated argument for a radical change of priorities in how many parents, educators and policymakers provide for the education, health and well being of children." — from the Foreword by Sir Ken Robinson

"We have undervalued the role of play in school to our own detriment as educators, and that of our students. In a culture where standardized testing has crowded out inquisitiveness and play, our students don't get an opportunity to tinker and experiment without high stakes judgments. Without play, teachers don't get to learn from watching their students be unbound by their inner creative selves. When children play, we observe the possibility of their imagination, and retool our structured classroom learning to create activities that model the authentic play and joy of students. It's a missed opportunity to learn from a feedback loop on what comes naturally to children. Play can liberate the power of inquiry in classrooms, that ironically can produce better test scores. Kudos for being so bold with this book!" — Eric Contreras, Principal, Stuyvesant High School, New York City

"Play develops our imagination and capacity to collaborate and is what makes us human. Sahlberg and Doyle have written a brilliant and compelling manifesto for bringing play back into the lives of children. Let the revolution begin!" — Tony Wagner, best-selling author of The Global Achievement Gap and Creating Innovators.

"Insightful... An excellent offering for parent activists, education students, and school administrators."—Library Journal

"The book convincingly shows the reader that all children deserve to grow physically, emotionally, academically and socially—the benefits of real play nurture the soul as well as the development of the whole child. What's more important than that?"
School Administrator Magazine

"The book makes a case not only for the value of free play but the necessity of it: It is where children in fact develop the social and emotional abilities that they need... A clarion call back to the world of childhood joy and exploration."

Library Journal

06/28/2019

Finnish educator Sahlberg and TV producer and author Doyle, both parents of young children, focus on the importance of play: specifically, self-directed outdoor play. The verdict is in: the American Academy of Pediatrics strongly encourages play in schools and states that "The lifelong success of children is based on their ability to be creative and to apply the lessons learned from playing." The authors look at play-based experiments all over the globe, including "Anji Play," an experiment in play taking place in China's preschools, and Finland's educational system, which stresses play and is considered to be among the best in the world. They conclude that play deprivation is the result of colossal governmental mismanagement. The culprit is the Global Education Reform Movement, which favors academic performance, as measured by standardized testing, over children's engagement and well-being. Each of the last three presidential administrations is guilty of pushing standardized testing over respect for individual growth and strength. This insightful work concludes with ideas for change, emphasizing the joy children feel when they're allowed to play and the tension and unhappiness that ensue when their days are filled with preparation for standardized testing. VERDICT An excellent offering for parent activists, education students, and school administrators.—Elizabeth Safford, Boxford Town Lib., MA

Product Details

BN ID: 2940174032767
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 08/06/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
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