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Help your child play to lay the foundation for future academic excellence

JOBURG – The way your child plays from a young age may affect their future academic excellence.

 

Online exclusive

Giving their children a head start is something parents want to do. Unfortunately, the way this is done in our hyper-competitive, over the structured world may, in fact, be working against exactly these intentions.

More and more research is showing that the most critical activity for the development of little children’s brains and their social and cognitive skills before they go to school, is good old-fashioned play.

Far less is gained when little children have full schedules of structured activities, from basic maths classes to early reading, gymnastics, kiddy music and mini-soccer.

Barbara Eaton, academic development advisor for the pre-primary schools’ division at Advtech said, “When it comes to brain development, time spent in the classroom and at other structured activities is less important than time on the playground.”

She said that research by Sergio Pellis, from the University of Lethbridge in Canada, showed that the experience of play changed the connections of the neurons in the pre-frontal section of a child’s brain and that without play experience, those neurons remained unchanged.

“Pellis found that it was those changes in the prefrontal cortex during childhood that helped wire up the brain’s executive control centre, which has a critical role in regulating emotions, making plans and solving problems. In other words, play prepares a young brain for life, love and even schoolwork.”

She warns parents whose children’s rooms look like toyshops that they need to get things back to basics because the kind of play that is beneficial is primarily the kind of play that requires creativity, imagination and problem-solving.

“In the pre-school phase, children need basic toys, not those with roles defined by the media, as the latter limits imagination and the opportunities to plan and create. Provide the child with a good set of plain wooden bricks, a few non-battery-operated cars, a soft doll or two, a teddy, some plastic plates and cups and a big ball.

“Old blankets or sheets for making houses and tents and some boxes and crates will provide the basis for endless creative and imaginative play. Playdough, some crayons and big sheets of paper – not colouring books – as well as some paint, will amply provide for creativity.”

She said that parents need to appreciate that in allowing their children plenty of opportunities to play with others and alone, they are laying the foundations for academic success.

“Young children work hard at play, and it is not for nothing that play is considered a child’s work. They invent scenes and stories, solve problems and negotiate their way through social roadblocks. They know what they want to do and they work and plan to do it.”

Details: 021 683 6464; gwenb@meropact.co.za; www.advtech.co.za

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