Play at the Center of the Curriculum, 6th edition

Published by Pearson (March 21, 2014) © 2015
  • Judith VanHoorn
  • Patricia Monighan Nourot
  • Barbara Scales
  • Keith Rodriguez Alward

Title overview

  • Carefully written and coordinated chapter features enhance student learning.
    • Learning Outcomes provide overviews at the beginning of each chapter.
    • Chapter Summaries review main points and highlight key concepts.
    • Applying Your Knowledge features at the end of each chapter help students assess and review their understanding.
    • NEW! A new chapter feature, Family Diversity: A Closer Look, illustrates many ways that play-centred curricula provide inclusive, welcoming programs for children and families.
  • A blend of how-to practice and theory plus extensive updates in each new edition make this both a current and a classic text on play that includes all children.
    • Practice blends with theory, empirical evidence from research, and the growing professional literature on children’s play to give students the background they need to plan and implement a balanced play-centred program for children ages three through eight.
    • Extensive literature reviews and discussions, plus numerous references are cited throughout the text to support students’ development as informed professionals in early childhood education with a broad knowledge of the literature in the field.
    • Clearly organised and structured in a manner that engages students’ interests and promotes learning, the text is designed for use with students from a range of educational backgrounds and experiences.
    • An emphasis on a multicultural and inclusive focus on the play-centred curriculum ensures students’ understanding of the importance of recognising and integrating the knowledge and interests of children from diverse backgrounds and cultures, and meeting the needs of dual language learners.
    • NEW! A new chapter feature, Family Diversity: A Closer Look, illustrates many ways that play-centred curricula provide inclusive, welcoming programs for children and families.
    • An emphasis on including children with special needs is reflected in the book’s discussions, references, and classroom examples to help students understand how play reflects and supports all children’s strengths and needs.
    • Moving beyond the focus of other books on play in early childhood settings, this text shows not only how play supports children’s development of content area knowledge, but also how content area curriculum can support rich play. Students understand more fully that play is central to development and at the centr of the curriculum.
    • Frameworks and standards are discussed throughout, including the Common Core Standards and early learning standards. Chapters include explicit focus and numerous classroom examples to help prepare students to work in programs that address the standards.
    • In keeping the teacher’s role as central to the play-centred curriculum, each chapter emphasises teachers’ roles in supporting spontaneous and guided play as well a
  • NEW! An expanded discussion of current topics related to play in practice and policy covers play and standards socialization and outdoor play.
  • NEW! Scores of updated references are cited throughout.
  • NEW! New classroom anecdotes and vignettes link current best practices with theory and empirical research.
  • NEW! A new chapter feature, Family Diversity: A Closer Look, illustrates many ways that play-centered curricula provide inclusive, welcoming programs for children and families.
  • NEW! Updated and new chapter features help promote student understanding and learning:
    • Learning Outcomes provide overviews at the beginning of each chapter.
    • Chapter Summaries review main points and highlight key concepts.
    • Applying Your Knowledge features at the end of each chapter help students assess and review their understanding.
  • NEW! A new focus on Advocating for Play includes features throughout the text that provide resources for advocacy and shows students how early childhood professionals become informed advocates for play practices and policies that benefit children.
    • Vignettes describe teachers’ daily acts of advocacy-developing environments that support play as well as case studies of teachers working with others to affect public policy.
  • NEW! An increased emphasis on STEM disciplines and numerous examples show students how science, technology, engineering, and mathematics are integral dimensions of rich spontaneous and guided play in the play-centered curriculum.
  • NEW! The mathematics and science chapters are thoroughly revised based on the Common Core State Standards.
  • NEW! Special emphasis on promoting children’s health, well being, and safety is fostered through the Outdoor Play features.
    • Included are numerous practical strategies and resources on the contributions of outdoor play to children’s healthy development.
    • The role of rough and tumble play is discussed in an expanded section.
    • Toys and Technology as Tools for Play reconsiders the benefits and risks of new media technology and recommends guidelines for using screen technology.
  • NEW! An increased emphasis on the importance of children’s connection with nature and the environment is presented in the chapters on outdoor play, science, and art share.
  • NEW! New anecdotes and practical new green curriculum elements in these chapters involve exploration of the natural environment.

Table of contents

Chapter 1 Looking at Play Through Teachers' Eyes

Chapter 2 Play and Development: Theory

Chapter 3 Play as the Cornerstone of Development: The Literature

Chapter 4 Orchestrating Children's Play: Setting the Stage

Chapter 5 Orchestrating Play: Interactions With Children

Chapter 6 Play as a Tool for Assessment

Chapter 7 Mathematics in the Play- Centered Curriculum

Chapter 8 Language, Literacy, and Play

Chapter 9 Science in the Play-Centered Curriculum

Chapter 10 The Arts in the Play-Centered Curriculum

Chapter 11 Play and Socialization

Chapter 12 Outdoor Play

Chapter 13 Toys and Technology as Tools for Play

Chapter 14 Conclusion: Integrating Play, Development, and Practice

References

Name Index

Subject Index 

Author bios

Judith Van Hoorn, Patricia Nourot, Barbara Scales, and Jane Perry were doctoral students of Millie Almy, a pioneer in the field of children’s play, whose work inspires and informs their teaching, research, and writing. Looking at Children's Play: The Bridge between Theory and Practice, by Monighan Nourot, Scales, and Van Hoorn was co-authored with Millie Almy.

 

Dr. Judith Van Hoorn is Professor Emerita at the University of the Pacific and was Visiting Professor and Co-Director of the Children’s School at Mills College. She has worked with children and families in Head Start programs, elementary schools, and was a Peace Corps Volunteer, teaching English to middle school students. She is active member of NAEYC’s Interest Forum, Play, Policy, and Practice and the American Psychological Association where she served as a Representative on APA’s governing Council, sponsoring policies and actions to benefit children and families. She is a past president of APA’s Division of Peace Psychology and co-chairs the Peace and Ethnicity working group. She presents widely at national and international conferences. In addition to writing on children’s play, she has co-authored numerous publications in the area of peace education and peace psychology, including the book, Adolescent Development and Rapid Social Change: Perspectives from Eastern Europe and the recent chapter, In Harms Way? Or Are They?: War, Young children in the United States and Social Justice, co-authored with Diane Levin.  As an educator, writer, researcher, and advocate for children, she focuses on play and social justice issues that affect children’s lives. At play, Judy reads, hikes, spends time with friends and relatives, and, of course, plays with children, especially her grandchildren.

 

 

Dr. Patricia Nourot (1947-2006) earned a PhD in Educational Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley in 1983 and joined the School of Education at Sonoma State University in 1988. She assumed leadership as Coordinator of the Early Childhood credential and MA programs in 1990 and continued in that role until her retirement in 2004.  She was a friend and role model to her students. Throughout her career she worked closely with school districts in Sonoma, Napa, and Solano Counties toward the goal of high quality education for preschool, primary, and elementary age children. A renowned scholar of early childhood education and children’s play, she gave many keynote addresses and published widely on topics such as the history of play, and the importance of socio-dramatic play. In 2008, the Play, Policy, and Practice Interest Forum of NAEYC established the Patricia Monighan Nourot Award to be given annually for leadership in play scholarship in honor of Pat’s lifetime of work on behalf of children’s play.

 

 

Dr. Barbara Scales, held appointments as Head teacher, research coordinator and administrator of the Harold E. Jones Child Study Center of the University of California for nearly 3 decades.  She received her doctorate from the University of California at Berkeley. While doing graduate studies at UC she worked as Thelma Harms’ graduate teaching assistant at the U.C. Berkeley  Child Study Center and was influenced by Harms’ work on environmental assessment. She has authored a number of books and articles based on her research at the Child Study Center on play and the social environment and other topics such as children's gender and cultural awareness, language and literacy, and the uses of the arts and drama in the classroom. Her recent work includes Creating A Classroom Of Inquiry: University Of California: Berkeley’s Harold E. Jones Child Study Center, written with Jane Perry and Rebecca Tracy. She has presented at numerous conferences of the NAEYC and The Society for the Study of Play (TASP). She most recently presented with these colleagues at a World Forum Foundation Conference a symposium entitled:  Design that Supports a Social Ecology of Children’s Learning:( The Harold E. Jones Child Study Center. When not engaged in these professional pursuits she has found joy and reward in art making throughout her life and is an accomplished painter and printmaker. 

 

Dr. Keith R. Alward, holds a Ph.D. in Educational Psychology with an emphasis on the development of human intelligence.  Prior to graduation from the University of California at Berkeley, he was for ten years a member of the Far West Regional Laboratory for Educational Research and Development.  He was instrumental in the development of a national early childhood educational program.  He is the producer of The Growing Mind, a series of films demonstrating stages in children’s development of reasoning.  Dr. Alward regularly presents at conferences, as well as writing and publishing on theoretical and practical issues in intellectual development and reasoning. In addition to this book on play, his most recent publication is an article entitled, The Conservation of Meaning: Piaget’s Social Theory Revisited. Dr. Alward finds pleasure in music, particularly classical opera as well as fine art.  He has painted since childhood and currently enjoys participating in watercolor painting with a group of like-minded friends.

 

 

Dr. Jane P. Perry is an ethnographer and the former research coordinator and teacher at the Harold E. Jones Child Study Center of the University of California at Berkeley. Her classroom perspective comes variously from being a student aid, to taking a cut in pay from her graduate teaching assistantship to continue her research of children and teachers from inside the classroom.  She uses a storytelling format to write about what it means to be children and teachers out on the playground and what it means to learn in a play-based classroom.  She is the author of Outdoor Play: Teaching Strategies with Young Children (Teachers College Press), “ ‘Sometimes I Pounce on Twigs Because I’m a Meat Eater’: Supporting Physically Active Play and Outdoor Learning” ( American Journal of Play), "Children's experience of security and mastery on the playground" in A Place For Play (Wayne State University Press), "Making Sense of Outdoor Pretend Play" in Spotlight on Young Children and Play (NAEYC), and  “Creating a Classroom of Inquiry at the University of California at Berkeley: The Harold E. Jones Child Study Center,” with colleagues Barbara Scales and Rebecca Tracy (Early Education and Development).  She presents at the national, state, and local level to diverse audiences on topics such as the role of the teacher in peer play and how to use the peer culture to plan, observe, facilitate inquiry, and match outdoor play to assessment goals, as well as advocating through the media. Through a collage of participant observations, ambient audio recordings, dreams, and text, she also writes short stories and produces acoustic poetry.

 

Dr. Sandra Waite-Stupiansky is Professor of Early Childhood and Reading at Edinboro University of Pennsylvania.  She has a Ph.D. from Indiana University, Bloomington.  Her areas of research include recess in elementary schools, play, and moral development.  She teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in early childhood education, child development, and math/science education.  She has been the managing editor of Play, Policy, and Practice Connections, an online publication of the Play, Policy, and Practice Interest Forum of the National Association for the Education of Young Children since 1995.  Recently, she co-edited Play: A Polyphony of Research, Theories, and Issues, Play & Culture Studies, Volume 12 and Learning Across the Early Childhood Curriculum, Advances in Early Education and Day Care, Volume 17 with Lynn Cohen.

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