The ARTS Schoolhouse Incubator blog-site has been created to facilitate design work by students of the "Design for Massive Change" Masters in Architecture Program at Lawrence Technological University. Operating from and focused on Detroit's oldest Schoolhouse.
Monday, February 28, 2011
Sunday, February 27, 2011
Informs our Understanding!
What Detroit can learn from Philly
A model for Midtown
By TODD SPANGLER FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
PHILADELPHIA — Many of the streets of this part of West Philadelphia used to be considered mean, despite the proximity of the University of Pennsylvania, an elite Ivy League institution. The advice was: Don’t go west of 40th.In the last 15 years, that’s all changed, thanks to a program of homeowner incentives and investment like one being attempted in Midtown Detroit.
In West Philadelphia today, restaurants bustle and coffeehouses abound along tree-lined streets as trolleys whoosh past toward Center City. Similar efforts are under way in other places — Baltimore, Cleveland — but the Midtown effort is a direct descendant of the Philadelphia example. The top consultant to the Detroit project was part of Penn’s program to improve the surrounding area and the first to take the incentive to move in. He still lives in the neighborhood. So what could it mean for Detroit’s Midtown, where employees of the Detroit Medical Center, Henry Ford Health System and Wayne State University are being offered incentives to move in? If the outcome in West Philly is an indication, it could result in higher property values, a drop in violent crime, better schools and a neighborhood where former suburbanites are eager to move. Doug Jerolmack, a 32-year-old geophysicist at Penn, bought into the neighborhood just four years ago, continuing a trend that started in the late 1990s, when homeowner initiatives were launched to bring professors and other employees in. He walks to work and has all the services he needs — plus dozens of friends — within a few blocks. “Now that we’re there,” he said, “I don’t want to live anywhere else.”
Photos by JOAN FAIRMAN KANES/Special to the Free Press This block of Spruce Street has both homes and businesses, including a restaurant called Rx housed in a former corner drugstore.
Student Daniel Nutters, left, and professor David Macauley, both University City residents, are at the Green Line Café.
Doug Jerolmack, an assistant professor at the University of Pennsylvania, bought a home in University City with help from financial incentives offered to Penn staff.
Philadelphia story
Detroit’s Midtown is studying success for its rebirth
By TODD SPANGLER FREE PRESS STAFF WRITER
PHILADELPHIA — In a way, the effort under way to remake Midtown Detroit started near a corner on Larchwood Street in West Philadelphia on Halloween night 1996. Vladimir Sled, a Russian biochemist at the nearby University of Pennsylvania, was walking home with his girlfriend on the tree-lined street when someone tried to snatch her purse. Sled fought with the assailant and was stabbed to death. For years before then, community activists and urban pioneers in the West Philly neighborhoods that had sprung up generations before as suburbs linked by streetcar to Center City had pleaded for civic involvement to address crime, garbage and a lack of services. Sled’s death changed everything: Penn employees, parents and students were outraged; the mayor, Ed Rendell, got involved. And Judith Rodin, then president at Penn, began an effort that, 15 years later, continues to remake the area surrounding the university. With homeowner initiatives like those being offered now in Midtown Detroit, as well as a host of other investments, Penn and other institutions turned their focus west of 40th Street toward the neighborhoods there — Spruce Hill, Walnut Hill, Garden Court and others. They attracted new residents from their employee base, not only with down-payment cash but with easy-to-get loans and new services, such as a supermarket and cinema that the university developed. A new improvement district organization was created — the University City District — which spends more than $5 million a year not only on foot and bicycle safety patrol crews and graffiti cleanup, but on marketing and development. The change has been evident: There are dog-walkers and block parties. Victorian mansions have been rehabbed. And it’s not just institutional workers with incentives available to them who are filling the neighborhoods. Bill Meinel, 51, is a marketing consultant who moved into a Garden Court home in 1998. A year later, he was robbed at gunpoint outside his new home. “I was freaked out,” he said. “My wife wanted to leave. I said, ‘Let’s give it some more time.’ ” Now, he doesn’t hesitate to walk his dogs at 2 a.m. Drop in serious crimes Driving north on I-76 past industrial yards and freight lines, then crossing the Schuylkill River and turning left onto South Street (which quickly becomes Spruce), you are surrounded by Penn, one of the oldest institutions of higher education in the U.S., founded by Benjamin Franklin. Renowned for its business, medical and communications schools, the university and its neighborhoods are home to 25,000 students. Unsurprisingly, like Midtown, it’s a big rental market. Plunge into those neighborhoods today and you find newly rehabbed apartment buildings, coffeehouses, chic restaurants and international bakeries, posh hotels and a supermarket, developed by the university. You also find block after block of three-story residences, and a trolley line along the southern end of the area toward Penn and beyond, Philadelphia’s Center City. According to records, serious crimes in the University City District have declined, and the median sales price of homes have increased, as of 2009 (even after a slight downturn, as experienced nationally), by 154%, over 2000. In Detroit, the three anchor institutions — Detroit Medical Center, Henry Ford Health System and Wayne State University — along with the University Cultural Center Association (UCCA), which spearheads redevelopment efforts in Midtown, are trying to recreate some of that success. They are offering home-buyers who are employees of those institutions a forgivable loan of $20,000 to move into the area, or $25,000, if taken at a rate of $5,000 a year over five years. Renters, an important part of the market in both places (rental occupancy is about 92% in Midtown), would receive $2,500 toward the cost of their apartment in the first year they lived in Midtown and $1,000 for the second year. When Penn started its program in 1998, it offered employees $15,000 in cash or $21,000 in installments (it’s $7,500 now) to buy in the neighborhood. The first taker was Omar Blaik, who happened to be an integral member of Penn’s planning team and who happens to now be the president of U3 Ventures, which is consulting with the UCCA and others on the project in Midtown. More than 900 Penn employees bought into the neighborhood, and many, including Blaik, are still there. As Blaik tells it, interest in Midtown Detroit is “much, much higher” than it was when the West Philly effort was getting off the ground. And if the necessary elements are successfully stitched together there — as he, the anchor institutions and UCCA President Sue Mosey are hoping — it could create an “eds and meds” model that could be reproduced in cities around the country. K-8 school a big draw Katia Strieck, 38, is a librarian at Penn who got $7,500 toward her second house in the neighborhood a few years ago. When she bought into the area the first time, in 2002, she wasn’t working at Penn — so she got no incentive — but by the second time around (when the incentive had been reduced) she had something more to stay for than money: the Penn Alexander School, a prekindergarten through eighth-grade public school. Penn not only helped develop it but provides an additional $1,330 per student to help educate them. The school comes up routinely as among the top reasons why people have come into the UCD and have stayed. “It’s a great community school,” said Strieck, whose daughter attends. New schools aren’t on top of Midtown Detroit’s list of needs, say Blaik and Mosey, in part because singles between 25 and 34 are most likely to move in. But both noted some of Detroit’s highest-performing public schools are in the area, and there are good charter schools there, too. West Philly’s successes have critics. “It’s led to a lot of displacement,” said the Rev. Larry Falcon, 66, who runs the Toviah Thrift Shop and Covenant Community Church from a storefront on Chestnut Street. Falcon acknowledged that the area may have less of some kinds of crime than it used to, but that’s due to the crack epidemic subsiding. And higher property values are not good news to his flock. A Free Press analysis of the seven census tracts wholly contained in the area showed that while the population appeared to stay largely the same from 2000 to 2009, the number of white residents increased 20% while the number of blacks decreased by 32%. In several of the census tracts, per-capita income has risen more than $10,000 a year during that time. Midtown progress If Mosey and Blaik are correct, and if the support is there and the commitment from the relevant parties lasts, there’s no reason to believe that Midtown might not someday look and feel like these streets of close-in West Philadelphia. Renters are encouraged to move in and stay, and much of the townhome and loft stock has been constructed in the last 10 years. Neighboring Woodbridge, which is included in the target area, features a number of single-family homes. Mosey cited statistics showing that average household income of new home-buyers in Midtown in 2008 was $144,321, up from $80,000 in 2006. UCCA has crews to clean up graffiti, and, along with WSU security, is looking to add safety patrols. A supermarket is essential, as is other development, some of which is under way. Businesses are committed to hiring and using vendors from the neighborhood. Displacement, the UCCA says, is not an issue. Funding is. Money has been authorized for the first stages of a light rail from Hart Plaza to Midtown, a big plus. But development and rebuilding efforts by the UCCA may count on grants — such as the Community Development Block Grants President Barack Obama’s budget promises to cut. Budget fights in Washington and Lansing could have a huge effect on plans in Midtown. “Financing is critical. I’m just going to be honest about that,” said Mosey. “We need more for the incentive program, and we need more for the rest of the real estate.… The public sector has to play a role in that, too.” John Fry, president of Drexel University, next to Penn, was at Penn as an executive president in the 1990s and helped guide its efforts to address the neighborhood’s challenges. Homeowner incentives, development, a sense of safety, a new public school — it was all essential. So was something else: time. Fry is now looking at improving the areas north and west of Drexel, with a foregivable loan for employees worth $15,000. “There are no quick fixes in any of this stuff,” he said. “Anybody who thinks this is a silver bullet is mistaken.”Photos by JOAN FAIRMAN KANES/Special to the Free Press
Homes along 43rd Street in the Spruce Hill neighborhood of University City, which surrounds the University of Pennsylvania.
Homes along 43rd Street in the Spruce Hill neighborhood of University City, which surrounds the University of Pennsylvania.
West Philadelphia’s Omar Blaik is helping with Midtown’s efforts.
George Carter works for Philadelphia’s University City District.
Saturday, February 26, 2011
Calling ALL Creative's and Innovator's (WHAT would that LOOK LIKE?)
Editorial
Tough assignment: Lift schools while cutting
Gov. Rick Snyder has set the bar pretty high for himself with regard to education.
The governor says he’ll outline his plans to make Michigan’s schools more competitive and efficient in a major address this April. But in his budget plan released last week, he proposed deep cuts to both K-12 and higher education. And the state Department of Education released a report this week that suggests the vast majority of students graduating from Michigan’s schools are not college-ready. It is a dramatic indication of how poorly Michigan has kept pace with educational excellence. So the governor starts from a premise that Michigan’s schools must do more with less — a theme that has emerged in his approach to many other areas, but that may not translate as cleanly in education. Snyder is surely right when he asserts, as he did during the campaign, that something about Michigan’s’ schools just doesn’t add up. The state ranks 18th in per-pupil spending and fourth in average teacher salaries, but it has been sliding in overall performance rankings and is 49th in ACT scores — a key measure of college readiness. Snyder has talked about applying his value-for-money approach to Michigan schools, trying to set guidelines and benchmarks for evaluating how wisely schools allocate their resources, instead of just how much they spend. A business approach may finesse some of the funding issues Michigan’s schools face. But as the Department of Education report makes clear, the state’s schools need something close to a comprehensive rebuild — of teaching methods, standards and the accountability to make sure they all work to prepare kids for higher learning. Teachers need to have their evaluations — and at least some of their pay — tied to student performance, and they need access to training and other professional development resources that will help them do better in the classroom. And the state’s standards — for student learning as well as teacher quality — need to be consistent with the highest in other states. Snyder will also have to lead on those fronts, even as he cuts funding and insists on efficiencies on other fronts. His business background will not be sufficient for that task; he will need dynamic educational leaders to take the helm and pull the state through a serious period of reform. Snyder’s rhetoric has set the bar high. He’ll need to match it with action to get Michigan’s schools back among the best.
Friday, February 25, 2011
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
50/50
A new cash contest — may your best idea win
FREE PRESS STAFF
The Detroit Media Partnership announced today Idea-Quest 2011, a contest with $10,000 in prize money for the two best ideas that help the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News better serve the community and help grow their audiences. Ideas might include something that enhances news coverage — in print, digitally and other ways — or helps the community in new ways or suggests how to do business more effectively. Ideas can be submitted by both employees and members of the public at http:// ideaquest.michigan.com . Two cash prizes of $5,000 each will be awarded to the winning ideas; one will be chosen from company employees and one from the public. The deadline for entries is midnight March 31, and the contest is open to anyone 18 years or older. Ideas may be submitted by individuals, teams or groups. Once submitted, ideas will be voted on April 1-14 by the public. The top five vote-getters in each category will have the opportunity to make a pitch to a final judging panel April 29 about why their idea should win. The judges are Patrick Doyle, CEO of Domino’s Pizza; Susie Ellwood, CEO of the Detroit Media Partnership, and Myron Maslowsky, senior vice president of group finance and administration at USA Today. The ideas selected will be implemented by the Detroit Media Partnership — and winning entrants will have the opportunity to be part of the implementation process.
Monday, February 21, 2011
The Too Much FUN Club! (Playful Discovery)
February 20, 2011
The Case for Play
How a handful of researchers are trying to save childhood.
Yana Paskova for The Chronicle Review
By Tom Bartlett
New York
Lucas Sherman and Aniyah McKenzie are building a house in Central Park. It is small, even by Manhattan standards, and the amenities leave something to be desired. But Lucas, who is 6, and Aniyah, who is 7, seem pleased with their handiwork. The house has a skylight (a hole torn in cardboard) and a flat-screen television (a black square of fabric). Lucas is too busy to answer a stranger's annoying questions, but Aniyah, who is holding a feather duster, explains that she must clean the walls because they are very dirty.
Lucas's father, Dan, observes the project from a nearby bench. "It's amazing what you can do with boxes and junk," he says.
That could almost be the slogan of the New York Coalition for Play, which provided the boxes and junk. The nonprofit association ran one of the two dozen booths at the Ultimate Block Party, an event last fall that brought together companies like Disney, Crayola, and Lego, along with researchers from Columbia and MIT, and attracted thousands of parents and children. The goal was to "celebrate the science of play" and to push back against the notion that education happens only when students are seated at their desks, staring at chalkboards, and scribbling furiously in their notebooks.
The rally of sorts was the brainchild of two top play researchers, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek and Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, the authors of Einstein Never Used Flashcards (Rodale, 2003) and editors, along with Dorothy Singer, of Play=Learning (Oxford University Press, 2006). They want to take what they've learned in the lab and proclaim it in the park, or wherever else people will listen. The message is this: The emphasis on standardized testing, on attempting to constantly monitor, measure, and quantify what students learn, has forced teachers to spend more of the school day engaged in so-called direct instruction and has substantially reduced or eliminated opportunities that children have for exploring, interacting, and learning on their own. Recess has, in many districts, vanished from the schedule entirely. After school, parents shuttle their kids from activity to activity, depriving them of unstructured time alone or with friends.
That matters, according to researchers, not just because play reduces stress and makes children more socially competent—which evidence suggests that it does. It matters also because play supposedly improves working memory and self-regulation; in other words, it makes kids sharper and better-behaved. So, ironically, by shortchanging them on play in favor of academics, we may actually be inhibiting their development. Hirsh-Pasek, a psychology professor at Temple University, considers the move away from play to be a crisis, even comparing it to global warming, in the sense that it may take years for the consequences to be felt. When it comes to the value of play, she declares: "The science is clear."
Enlarge Image
Yana Paskova for The Chronicle Review
But how clear is it? Even researchers who've devoted much of their careers to studying play question the more inflated claims of its importance. Within the world of those who take play seriously, there are multiple camps, each with its own dearly held tenets. There are the Free Players, who argue that play is a human right and that adults should more or less leave kids alone. There are the Play Skeptics, who see play as useful for blowing off steam but are dubious about its cognitive upside. And there are Play Moderates, who advocate a mix of free play, adult-guided play, and traditional classroom instruction. No matter whom you're talking with, though, it seems every discussion about play eventually comes around to a prolific Russian psychologist who died more than 75 years ago.
Before tuberculosis claimed him, at just 37, Lev Vygotsky managed to produce a stack of volumes on topics as diverse as the psychology of art, the relationship between thought and language, the problem of consciousness, the behavior of primitive man, scientific language, and child development. While the amount of work he cranked out is notable in itself, what's more impressive is how influential that work has become, even though much of it remained unpublished and untranslated for decades following his death.
For play researchers, no one looms larger than Vygotsky, whose name, along with that of his longer-lived and better-known contemporary, Jean Piaget, pops up on seemingly every other page of the literature. Vygotsky viewed play, particularly pretend play, as a critical part of childhood, allowing a child, as he said in one oft-repeated quote, to stand "a head taller than himself." His biggest theoretical contribution may have been the Zone of Proximal Development: the idea that children are capable of a range of achievement during each stage of their lives. In the right environment, and with the right guidance (which was later dubbed "scaffolding"), children can perform at the top of that range.
For instance, Vygotsky explained, when a child can pretend that a broomstick is a horse, he or she is able to separate the object from the symbol. A broom is not a horse, but it's possible to call a broom a horse, and even to pretend to ride it. That ability to think abstractly is a huge mental leap forward, and play can make it happen.
Among the many who have been influenced by Vygotsky is Deborah J. Leong, the author, along with Elena Bodrova, of Tools of the Mind: The Vygotskian Approach to Early Childhood Education, an attempt to turn his theories into practical classroom techniques. Leong, a professor emerita of psychology at Metropolitan State College of Denver, points out that when young children are pretending, they often use bigger words than they normally would and fully inhabit their roles, like mini Method actors. If they're playing doctor, for instance, they might say "injection" or "thermometer." Recently she watched a group of preschoolers pretending to work at a well-known chain hardware store. "Welcome to Home Depot," a 4-year-old said. "You can do it, we can help." Meanwhile another group of children, who were pretending to be airport screeners, informed a would-be passenger that a bottle she was carrying was larger than the permitted three ounces.
Pretend play isn't just about vocabulary. A 2007 study published in Science looked at how 4- and 5-year-olds who were enrolled in a school that used the play-based, Vygotsky-inspired Tools of the Mind curriculum measured up to children in a more typical preschool. The students in the play-based school scored better on cognitive flexibility, self-control, and working memory—attributes of "executive function," which has been consistently linked to academic achievement. The results were so convincing that the experiment was halted earlier than planned so that children in the typical preschool could be switched to the Tools of the Mind curriculum. The authors conclude: "Although play is often thought frivolous, it may be essential."
With evidence like that, you might think that the kind of guided pretend play that Vygotsky favored would be universally embraced. In fact, according to Leong, it's fast disappearing, as the idea of learning becomes synonymous with memorization and standardized tests. Play is steadily losing out to what play proponents refer to as the "drill and kill" method. "We drill more because they can't pay attention, but they can't pay attention because they don't have these underlying play skills, so we drill more," Leong says. "It's pathetic."
Not to mention misguided, according to Kathy Hirsh-Pasek. Whether children play enough isn't an obscure debate among developmental psychologists. If it's true that children who spend too little time playing struggle with executive function, then we may be raising a generation of kids with less self-control, shorter attention spans, and poorer memory skills. If that really is the case, Hirsh-Pasek's talk about a crisis isn't so far-fetched.
She sees the Ultimate Block Party as the first step in a national effort to get people to stop dismissing play and start questioning the way we assume children learn. She wants to speak directly to parents, most of whom aren't poring over every issue of Child Development for the latest research on play. The goal, in a sound bite, is to take that research "into the streets, subways, and supermarkets."
It's not every day that an academic stages a spectacle in Central Park to bring attention to what is, honestly, a fairly small field of research. To pull it off, Hirsh-Pasek hired a public-relations agency and drummed up big-name corporate sponsors. There was a Sesame Street sing-a-long, what was billed as "New York's Largest Simon Says," and a Radio Disney Dance Party. A small company called Ridemakerz hawked its build-your-own remote-control cars. Not to mention the guy selling a nifty iPhone app that lets you play a technologically enhanced game of hide-and-seek using the smartphone's GPS capability.
There were also decidedly less-profit-driven booths, like the one run by the New York Coalition for Play. Rather than whiz-bang gadgets, they offered cardboard boxes and tubes, lots of fabric, ribbon, empty wine crates, and assorted items that would otherwise be found in a recycling bin. One of those overseeing the booth was Edward Miller, a senior researcher at the nonprofit group Alliance for Childhood, part of whose mission is to promote creative play. When asked what he thought of the Ridemakerz booth just a few yards away, he couldn't help rolling his eyes. "We're also concerned about the overcommercialization of play," he said. "The right answer is less programming and more opportunities for kids to make up things on their own."
Hirsh-Pasek is well aware that play purists look askance at including corporations in the pro-play campaign. Those who take a hard line on free play—that is, giving children basic materials like boxes and fabric and then leaving them alone—have zero use for Nickelodeon kid bands and pricey remote-control cars, which they see as just more ways for adults to get in the way. What she has in mind is a big tent, one that doesn't exclude fancy toys or snappy musical productions. Nor does she have much patience for advocates who claim that the only valuable play is the kind that doesn't involve anyone over 18. She wants kids to play on their own, sure, but she also wants them to engage in more guided play, where an adult or older child can take part.
There's research to back her up. A study she recently submitted for publication gave blocks to children divided into three groups. In one group, the blocks had already been assembled into a heliport. A second group was given blocks, and adults helped the children follow directions to build a heliport. A third group was given blocks and told to do whatever it wanted. The researchers then listened to the language children were using as they played. Those who were building a heliport with an adult used the most imaginative and spatial language (like "below," "on top," "next to"); the kids who were playing with the preassembled heliport used the least.
While she's no purist, Hirsh-Pasek is suspicious of some of the toys that purport to be educational. The title of Einstein Never Used Flashcards (subtitled How Our Children Really Learn—and Why They Need to Play More and Memorize Less) is an apparent slap at the Disney-owned Baby Einstein company. She also cites research that shows that electronic books for kids, the kind that talk and make noises, actually distract young readers: Kids who read them remember less of the narrative than kids who read the story on old-fashioned paper. What's more, Hirsh-Pasek says, she turned down millions of dollars from a corporate sponsor (which she declines to identify) that requested the right to name the Ultimate Block Party.
In many ways, she is placing herself in the middle. She's not trying to run toy companies out of business, but she is willing to criticize products that do more harm than good. She's not attempting to tear down traditional classroom education, but she is pushing hard for more play in schools obsessed with testing. To that end, she's working to make the research on play palatable for teachers and parents.
How good that research is, though, is a matter of debate. Peter K. Smith began studying play in the mid-1970s. At the time, he was a believer in the "play ethos," which he defines in his recent book, Children and Play, as the "very strong and unquestioned view of the importance of play." In that book, he quotes numerous researchers waxing enthusiastic about play's importance, asserting that it is "vital" and "the work of childhood" and "the supreme psychological need."
Later, Smith, a professor of psychology at the University of London, became a skeptic. "I looked at the textbooks of play" from Piaget forward, he says. "They said play is essential for development, that it enhanced this and this, and that and that, but they don't cite any evidence." So he decided to take a closer look. In the late 1980s, he picked a couple of studies that claimed to demonstrate the benefits of play. In one study, researchers had found that playing with small objects helped young children learn how to solve problems. Another showed that play made kids more creative. Smith replicated both using a double-blind procedure to eliminate any potential research bias.
His findings showed no difference in creativity or problem-solving ability between the kids who played and those who didn't. It was a setback for play advocates and made researchers wonder whether the field was based on science or sentimental hype.
More than two decades after Smith's debunking, researchers like Angeline Lillard, a professor of psychology at the University of Virginia, are still raising some of the same questions. "I think if you look hard at all the studies people cite as showing that play helps development, they are either correlation studies"—in other words, they don't prove that play actually causes cognitive gains—"or they have problems," she says.
Not that Lillard, or Smith, for that matter, is antiplay. Lillard is the author of the best-selling book Montessori: The Science Behind the Genius and has written about the possible links between pretend play and social cognition. She does, however, believe that the field is in need of newer and better research. "My own view is that I would like for us to have firmer footing to stand on," she says.
But while scientific support for play can be overstated, sometimes the criticism of play can be unfounded. Last September, Time magazine published an article with the headline "Free Play Won't Make Your Child Smarter." The article was prompted by a study that looked at how 2,751 preschoolers fared in programs with a variety of approaches, including free play and traditional group instruction. That study concluded that "more quality instructional time" and "less free play time" would better prepare kids for school.
But the study's case against play in school isn't entirely persuasive. It's true that the kids who spent the largest chunk of their school day (41 percent) engaged in free play were behind their counterparts on skills like naming letters, naming numbers, and writing their names. But those who spent 29 percent of their time in teacher-guided play actually performed at the same level as the kids who played much less (only 13 to 15 percent of the time) when it came to naming numbers, highest number counted, language and literacy, word and letter identification, and writing their names legibly. In short, they played twice as much but learned the same amount. One of the authors of the report, Nina Chien, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of California at San Diego, acknowledges in an e-mail that this was proof "that kids can play a lot but still make good gains."
More interesting is what the researchers didn't test. Did the children who played more demonstrate higher levels of self-control and better working memory, as other research suggests they would? If so, did they outperform the kids—preschoolers, remember—who spent 15 percent or less of their time playing? Is being smart a race to see who can memorize the most, or is it about developing capacities to deal with a complex world?
While much of the research on play focuses on young children, the implications go well beyond third grade. In junior high, play is more likely to be called "discovery learning." When professors try to get college students to look up from their iPhones, it's probably referred to as "active engagement." But the principles are the same. Stuart Brown, one of the authors of Play: How It Shapes the Brain, Opens the Imagination, and Invigorates the Soul, has reviewed thousands of life histories and concluded that play is essential for children and adults. He's intent on spreading that gospel through his organization, the National Institute for Play, whose mission is to make human play a "credentialed discipline in the scientific community."
And it's not just people. That nonhuman primates engage in sophisticated play has been thoroughly established, and anyone who has dangled a string in front of a cat has conducted animal research. In his book The Genesis of Animal Play, Gordon Burghardt, a psychology professor at the University of Tennessee, reports playful behavior in lizards, turtles, and birds. Even fish have been known to amuse themselves.
For Hirsh-Pasek, the universality of play is part of the evidence of its value. Why would we do it if it didn't confer an evolutionary advantage? She concedes that some of the play research is more suggestive than slam-dunk, and that cleaner, stronger studies would be welcome. But she also argues that we already know enough to conclude that play matters, and that failing to preserve it in the lives of children could be a disaster.
She's doing her part to stave that off. Hirsh-Pasek says 40 cities have expressed interest in holding their own Ultimate Block Parties. She and her colleagues will soon unveil a Web site to promote play research, and more books are on the way. Their goal, she says, is to restore play to its rightful, respected place in the lives of children. "Even if we don't understand it perfectly, it's silly to take play away from society," she says. "It's like taking love away. It's crazy."
The Play Books
The Ambiguity of Play, by Brian Sutton-Smith (Harvard University Press, 1997)
Sometimes called the godfather of play studies, Brian Sutton-Smith has written or edited dozens of books on play and games. He often writes about play from a Darwinian perspective: "Play begins as a major feature of mammalian evolution and remains as a major method of becoming reconciled with our being within our present universe. In this respect, play resembles both sex and religion, two other forms—however temporary or durable—of human salvation in our earthly box."
Einstein Never Used Flashcards: How Our Children Really Learn, by Roberta Michnick Golinkoff, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, and Diane Eyer (Rodale Books, 2003)
The culture is giving us the wrong messages about how to educate young children, write Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, Roberta Golinkoff, and Diane Eyer. Earlier isn't necessarily better. Learning doesn't happen only in a classroom. They contend that the "evidence tells us that less can be more. It tells us that the 'adultification' and acceleration of children is not a positive choice, but one that robs children of their freedom to be. It tells us that to be happy, well-adjusted, and smart, children do not need to attend every class and own each educational toy."
Recess: Its Role in Education and Development, by Anthony D. Pellegrini (Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 2005)
Recess is disappearing at many schools across the country, squeezed out by academics. Yet research by Anthony Pellegrini, a professor of educational psychology at the University of Minnesota, indicates that children are more attentive to their schoolwork after recess than before. He has argued that "recess breaks maximize children's cognitive performance and adjustment to school," and that it may be "one of the few times during the day when children have the opportunity to interact with peers and develop social skills free from adult intervention."
A Child's Work: The Importance of Fantasy Play, by Vivian Gussin Paley (University of Chicago Press, 2004)
Vivian Gussin Paley argues that the loss of creative free time, particularly storytelling and role-playing, can harm children emotionally and intellectually. Paley, a longtime kindergarten teacher at the University of Chicago Laboratory Schools, writes: "The children themselves continually reminded us that play was still their most usable context. It was not the monsters they invented that frightened them in kindergarten; it was being told to sit still and pay attention for long periods of time."—Tom Bartlett
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