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“We’re all sad, and we’re a little worried…We’re sad about something missing in childhood,”psychologist Michael Thompson told 900 early childhood educators from 22 states packed into a lecture hall last week.“We have to fight back,”he declared.“We’re going to fight for play.”
It is estimated that since the 1980s the average American children have 8 to 12 fewer hours of free play time per week.Some of the factors behind the decline have been there for decades, others are more recent.Among the key factors are:
●Parents are unwilling to let their kids play outside on their own, for fear of injury or other accidents, and organized sports and other structured activities take up a large part of a child’s non-school hours.
●More hours per week are spent by kids watching TV, playing video games, using the Internet, and communicating on cell phones.
●More importance is attached to formal learning in preschool, more homework for primary school students and more pressure from parents on young children to quickly acquire academic skills.
“Parents are more self-conscious and competitive than in the past,”Thompson said.“They’re pushing their kids to do better than others…Free play loses out.”But he points out that this option doesn’t necessarily breed(培养)creativity and can lead to burnout for good young athletes and frustration for the less skilled.He is also concerned that preschools, in the drive to prepare students for the academic challenges ahead, are reducing the opportunity for group fantasy play-and thus reducing children’s chances to learn on their own about fairness, kindness and other social interactions(交往).
The consequences are potentially awful, according to Thompson, who points out that reduced time to play freely with other children is producing a generation of unsociable young people and is a factor behind high rates of weight problems, anxiety, and depression among youth.“Without enough opportunity for forms of play that promote creative thinking,”he says,“America’s children will be at a disadvantage in the global economy.”
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