Creating Challenging Outdoor Play Spaces · Tovey, H (2007) Playing Outdoors, Spaces and Places,...

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Creating Challenging Outdoor Play Spaces Helen Tovey

Transcript of Creating Challenging Outdoor Play Spaces · Tovey, H (2007) Playing Outdoors, Spaces and Places,...

Creating Challenging Outdoor Play Spaces

Helen Tovey

Photo: Alan Sutton. PlayLink Places for Play Exhibition www.freeplaynetwork.org.uk

A provocative environment invites curiosity and has infinite possibilities

Creating challenging outdoor spaces

Provocative environments

Space for the imagination

Transformable spaces

Natural spaces

Wild spaces

Opportunities for risky ‘dizzy’ play

Set and pursue their own tasks

Exploring,

experimenting,

solving

problems

Spaces for imagination

to flourish

Incidental

features of the

environment

offer rich

symbolic

potential for

play

Symbolic transformation

is hugely significant

in children’s thinking

Materials which can be transformed not ‘pre formed’

`Loose parts’

Enclosures,

dens and

places to hide

Wild Spaces

Children love a wilderness. So one plot should be allowed to grow wild but many beautiful things can be planted in it.’

(McMillan 1919:47)

Importance of rough ground and change of levels

Engagement with

the natural world

Community playthings 2009

Spaces for being daring and adventurous

Opportunities for challenge and taking risks

Culture of risk aversion and risk anxiety ?

Too risky?

Unsafe?

Risk taking is associated with-

Positive learning dispositions (Guy Claxton)

Mastery – an ‘I can do it’ attitude (Carole Dweck)

Playing at the very edge of capabilities (Vygotsky)

Emotional well being and resilience‘Lack of risk in play is damaging children’ Mental Health Foundation (2002)

We must not lose sight of the important developmental role of play in pursuit of the unachievable goal of absolute safety.

UK Health and Safety Executive

cited in Ball, D, Gill, T & Spiegal, B ( 2008) Managing Risk in play provision

www.playengland.org.uk

Creating challenging spaces for play

Provocative environments

Space for the imagination

Direct engagement with the natural world

Wild spaces and uneven terrain

Opportunities for risk and challenge

Adults who engage in and value such play

Does environment make a difference? Susan Herrington - project to change play area for

birth to threes Aimed to translate knowledge of children’s

development into landscape design.infants-

-more active-used whole space-more varied and complex play-more interactions with natural environment-significantly more interactions with adults

(Herrington 1997)

`If you are going to keep children safe …you must provide places in which they can get the thrills they need; there must be trees they can climb and ways in which they can safely get the experience of adventure and the sense of challenge that they crave.’ Susan Isaacs 1936

References

Claxton, G (1999) Wise Up the Challenge of Life Long Learning London: Bloomsbury

Community Playthings (2008) I made a Unicorn. The value of open ended play RobertsbridgeCommunity Playthings

Herrington, S (1997 ) the Received view of Play and the Subculture of infants Landscape Journalvol 16 no 2

Isaacs, S ( 1938) lecture to National Safety Congress in National Froebel Foundation Bulletin1960 no 125

Mental health Foundation (1999) Bright Futures:Promoting Children and Young People's Mental Health. London, Mental Health Foundation.

McMillan, M ( 1919) The Nursery School London Dent

Stephenson, A ( 2003) Physical risk taking: dangerous or endangered? Early Years Vol 23 no 1

Tovey, H (2007) Playing Outdoors, Spaces and Places, Risk and Challenge. Maidenhead: Open University Press

Helen Tovey

Principal lecturer Early Childhood Studies

Roehampton University, London

[email protected]