Fisher Price Little People
For me, play was a way to
escape reality. Solitary play was my
preferred play. I would spend hours in
my bedroom playing with my Fisher Price Little People toys. My older brother
and sister would be at a friend’s house or school, my dad worked a typical 9-5
office job, and my mother would do housework on good days, so I would be on my
own to entertain myself. On not so good
days, my mom would sleep on the couch.
My mom fell ill from a reaction to a swine flu vaccination when I was
four years old, so I preferred to play with toys that I could use my imagination. On weekends, the neighborhood kids would run
and play. Since we had a pool in our
backyard, our metal playset was between our house and another. It was accessible to all the kids. We would swing on swings and imagine flying
to faraway places. Imagination play was
my escape from reality and a way to go to novel places and meet new people.
Play today is different from yesterday’s
play. Children still use imaginative
play to escape reality and travel to new worlds. Some still play with play figures, some read
books, and some only watch television or play video games. In my opinion, playing with figures, reading
books, and playing on playgrounds allows for a child to freely use their
imagination and creativity to travel to new place and meet new people while
technology directs the children to the places and people. Hopefully, with the assistance and guidance
from teachers and parents, children will learn to develop a healthy balance
between play with technology and unplugging and playing with low-tech or no-tech
toys. Creativity and imagination are essential for school readiness and a
lifetime skill. Educator should offer children
opportunities on a regular basis to freely explore and express their creativity
and imagination.
Even though play was my escape
from reality growing up, it was also my way of learning about the world around
me, learning new skills, new concepts, and much more. The Fisher Price Little People play sets were
my favorite solitary and imagination play items. I had other play items that made play
important and memorable for me. One
year, my parents bought me a Texas Instruments Speak & Spell that I loved
to play games on and challenge myself to learn to spell new and unfamiliar
words. I still have that Speak & Spell and grew up enjoying grammar and
spelling. On her good days, my mom and I
would play board games. I would use my
birthday money to buy a new board game, so my mom and I would have a new game to
learn to play. These games would be
played when a friend would spend the night. Today, I cherish the evenings that we get together
with friends and play card games. The
conversation, laughter, bonding are irreplaceable memories that link back to
the days of playing board games with my mom.
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Hi Donna,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading your blog and oh how I remember playing outside and enjoying the slide. Your pictures brought so many great memories for me as a child. That is so cool how all the kids could enjoy your pool what a great idea. I agree with you that we must give children the opportunity to freely explore and express themselves with their imagination and creativity.
Donna your first was amazing. I love to just talk to my children and listen to the way they view things. They way the interpret the world is amazing. Today I got a chance to see first hand the impact play has on children as I watched a 7 month old bang a toy on my hard tile floors and then the sofa as way of experimenting and understanding sound as well as the way the people reacted around her. Play is, in my opinion, one of the best learning modes.
ReplyDeleteDonna,
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed your post and thank you for sharing that special part of your childhood. Board games were something that you can do together as a family. Your post has mad me more aware of spending quality time with my bonus daughter. The little things matter.
Donna,
ReplyDeleteI am sorry to hear about your mom. That must have been hard on you. You must have used play to release stress. Did you ever use to play to out out a role as a mother that was capable of taking care of you everyday? I'm sure she loved you but it sounds like she really suffered physically. Mothers most certainly have days where they are tapped, but this sounds like this was a frequent occurrence.
Donna,
ReplyDeleteGreat Post, and thank you for sharing.
I love the second quote you used from Curtis & Carter. I will defiantly be using this for my next directors meeting. Thanks!
I also enjoyed how you mentioned TV and Video Games as forms of what is classified as "play." Many educator wont acknowledge this as a form of play, or method of learning but it is within the generation we are teaching to. In elementary school I wrote observations within notebooks, and completed homework handwritten. Today everything is completed through type and more kindergarten classrooms are providing iPads for every students when completing an activity during the day or as an end of day "treat."
What advice would you provide for parents who feel that their child is just "stuck" on the iPad?
Donna
ReplyDeleteyour post was good. Thanks for sharing a piece of your childhood with me. I didnt realize that video games was classified as play. Having an ipad in the classroom is a staple item to have. This is how we train our children.