I believe play is an important factor in children's development and his semester we read up on key theories that contributed a great deal in the early childhood sector. The late 19th and early 20th century saw the emergence of four great constructivist theorists’, Jean Piaget (1896-1980), Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934), George Herbert Mead (1863-1931), Erik Erikson (1902-1994). They viewed educators’ role as directors of children’s development through play. They believed that a child would explore and adapt to the surrounding environment by adjusting to the social, cultural and physical aspects of their lives. According to Van Hoorn, 2011, play is a fundamental part of early childhood, which encourages young children to develop and learn particularly between the ages of 0 to eight years. Play develops in children a sense of self, physicality, personality, intellect and social capacity.
Piaget’s stages of development. Children better understand the world, which develops gradually across each of the stages.
- Practice/functional play (Sensorimotor, 0-2 years old) infants exhibit mastery of movement, when infants repeat an action, like waving their arms in the air.
- Symbolic play (Preoperational Intelligence, 2-7 years old) children start to role-playing and pretend one object represents another, like using blocks and play dough.
- Game with rules (Concrete operational, 7 to 11 years old) children learn to negotiate with other players and play games with rule.
- The last stage (Formal Operational, 12 to adulthood) concrete think about the future.
While Piaget and Vygotsky both believed that children learn to
express ideas, feelings, and needs thru symbolic play and symbolic role-play
with objects. Vygotsky coined the terms Zone of Proximal development (ZPD), where teachers discover how new concepts, capabilities and abilities emerge in the
play of each child in relationship to others.
The basic principles underlying Vygotsky's theory is that: children construct their own knowledge, development can not be separated from it's social context, learning can lead development and language plays a key role in mental development.
Based on Piaget, Vygotsky, Mead and Erikson’s development theories,
educators come to understand the use of play in an early childhood classrooms
and how vital it is for a child to develop through a positive process that is
influenced by family, community values and histories. As educators we can
augment the learning of children by listening, observing, understanding and
learning about sociocultural factors of the children in our schools. Play
reinforces the development and understanding of special concepts and provides
skills that align with academic norms.
Play also gives educators cues for assessing children and implementing
curriculum goals. It helps children develop to their full potential
intellectually, socially, morally, physically and emotionally as they learn
to
negotiate their developing with the demands of the group.
Reference:
Van Hoorn, J. N. (2011). Play and Development: Theory,
Play at the centre of the Curriculum (5th ed.). Boston: Pearson Education
Inc.