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Draft:Free play

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A group of children playing with a balloon; Ismailia, Egypt

Free play is unstructured play among children without adult supervision who decide themselves how and what to play and make up the rules as they go along. Free play is crucial for child development, and promotes social skills, emotional health, resilience, cooperation, confidence, cognitive growth, and brain development.

A lack of free play has negative effects in childhood and through adolescence and beyond, but it isn't clear how serious the consequences are. Declines in unstructured outdoor play among children in the last few decades has led to concern among experts about negative physical and mental effects in many countries including increased obesity, depression, anxiety, and other issues.

Terminology

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Mark Twain, in the voice of Tom Sawyer (1876), defined play in contrast with work: "Work consists of whatever a body is obliged to do, and play consists of whatever a body is not obliged to do."[1]

Peter Gray defined free play as unstructured play among children without adult supervision "in which the players themselves decide what and how to play and are free to modify the goals and rules as they go along. Pickup baseball is free play; a Little League game is not."[2]

Ellen Greenlaw defines it as "any type of unstructured play that is directed by the child".[3]

Free play is play that isn’t organized or directed by adults or older peers and that generally doesn't have a defined purpose or outcome.[4]

Free play has been termed "self-directed", as opposed to play which is guided by adults.[5] An earlier term for this is unstructured play.[6][7]

The term free play was used in its current sense in the 1967 educational film Organizing Free Play, produced by Vassar College for project Head Start (program) training programs.[8][9]

Make believe, also known as "pretend play", "fantasy play" or "imaginative play", is a loosely structured form of play that generally includes role-play, object substitution, and nonliteral behavior.[10]

The age group involved when discussing "children" is the years between about six and twelve. This the time when children, not yet affected by puberty, are involved in making friends, engaging in athletics, hobbies, and other non-sexual activities.[11]

History

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Background

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The history of early childhood education dates to the early nineteenth century, and began in Germany with Friedrich Fröbel's kindergarten, and in Britain with the infant school in Great Britain. These were both teacher-led efforts. In the kindergartens, the focus was not on teaching subjects but on a holistic approach developing basic social, emotional, motor and cognitive skills, with children taking an active part and supported by the teacher. In the British infant schools, traditional primary school subjects were taught in brief lessons with play and relaxation making up the time in between. Play was considered important in both systems, and continues to be.[12]

Lev Vygotsky was a Russian and Soviet psychologist, best known for his work in the 1920s on psychological development in children.[citation needed] Vygotsky‘s work on childhood was brief, but innovative and ahead of his time. He stressed the importance of representational play (make-believe; fantasy play) that flourishes in the preschool years and that later evolves into structured play with games and rules in middle childhood. It was central to his theory, and he viewed it was a leading factor in the development of fantasy play. He saw children as advancing themselves in psychological development, using make believe as a zone of developmment enabling such progress. Vygotsky saw play as having two unique features: it creates an imaginary situation that allows the child to work out unrealizable desires, and there are social rules based on real-world situations that define the parameters of the imaginary scenarios constructed by the child. Thus he saw this type of play as being an imaginary situation governed by socially determined rules.[13]

Rise

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Howard Chudacoff in his 2007 history of children at play called the first half of the twentieth century the "Golden Age of Unstructured Play".[7][6]

Decline

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In the second half of the century, however, free play declined sharply, and experts have noticed increases in anxiety, depression, and other problems in children and adolescents.[6] Unstructured outdoor play in children 3–12 has declined in the forty years since 1975, while computer and electronic games have increased in the first decade of the 21st century, leading to concerns about the ill effects of growing childhood obesity in many countries.[14] A few countries such as Hungary and Taiwan have taken steps at the governmental policy level to ensure opportunities for children to engage in free play.[15]

Types

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There are various types of play that fall under the definition of free play. Here are some:[16]

  • Creative – arts like drawing, coloring, painting, or sculpting; playing with art supplies; crafts
  • Imaginative – Playing dress-up; Acting out stories or scenarios; vrole-playing
  • Constructive – building with blocks, Lego, or other materials
  • Sensory – playing with sand, water, clay or similar
  • Exploratory – collecting rocks, leaves, seashells; exploring with magnifying glasses, nets, magnets
  • Independent – playing alone; reading (their own choice of material); playing with toys or items (of their choice)
  • Social – playing with others in their age group; inventing games to play together

Health impact

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Benefits

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Children playing; by Árpád Cserépy [hu] (1897)

Free play is crucial to children learning about their own interests, in exploring their world, and to thrive physically, emotionally, mentally, and socially.[5][4]

It is a natural and critical period of child development that is crucial for developing social skills, emotional health, resiliency, stress management, cooperation, confidence, building cognitive skills, and even brain size.[17][18][19]

A 2014 study investigated development of executive functions in children, and found that the more time children spent in unstructured activity, the better their self-directed executive functioning was. Conversely, the more time spent in structured activities, the worse it was.[20]

It's hard to isolate playfulness from other developmental factors, so the best evidence for the benefits of play comes from its use in mental health treatments. For instance, structured play in an Indian orphanage led to major gains in motor, cognitive, and social skills despite continued deprivation in the orphanage setting.[21]

Physically, free play contributes to motor skills, coordination, and overall health by promoting active movement.[22][page needed]

After free play during recess at school, children pay more attention than they do following after adult-led, structured physical activity.[23]

Risks of deprivation

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Lack of opportunities for free play in childhood carries a risk negative effects on growing children, and may be long-lasting. Psychologists are not in agreement on the amount of risk involved.Concerns are that it may result in anxious, unhappy and socially maladjusted adults.[18]

Research from animal studies shows that play deprivation hinders development in key areas of the prefrontal cortex. There is less data for human children because of ethics considerations, but similar effects were observed in severely maltreated children, such as those in Romanian orphanages, who showed impaired brain development and abnormal play behavior.[21]

Studies in prisoner populations have found an overrepresentation of inmates that were deprived of free play opportunities.[17] A commission established following the Texas tower shooting in 1966 found that the shooter's motivation was tied to a severe restriction of free play during childhood.[17][24]

Therapy

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The use of play therapy showed social improvements in children with autism spectrum disorder in several areas. including making friends, interactions with others, family relationships, dealing with stress, and less time spent playing alone.[21]

As human right

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The Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) is an international human rights treaty adopted by the United Nations in 1989 which sets out the civil, political, economic, social, health and cultural rights of children. Article 31 affirms a child's right to play.[25][26]

See also

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References

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Works cited

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  • Barker, Jane E; Semenov, Andrei D; Michaelson, Laura; et al. (16 June 2014). "Less-structured time in children's daily lives predicts self-directed executive functioning". Frontiers in Psychology. 5. Switzerland: Frontiers: 593. doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2014.00593. ISSN 1664-1078. OCLC 5608117880. PMC 4060299. PMID 25071617.
  • Bassett, David R.; John, Dinesh; Conger, Scott A.; et al. (2015). "Trends in Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviors of United States Youth". Journal of Physical Activity & Health. 12 (8). Champaign, Illinois: Human Kinetics Publishers: 1102–1111. doi:10.1123/jpah.2014-0050. ISSN 1543-3080. OCLC 5925008012. PMID 25347913 – via TWL. p. 1104: Trends in outdoor play have received increased attention in recent years. Louv has proposed that children today spend less time in unstructured, outdoor play, compared with previous generations. A decline in outdoor play is concerning for a number of reasons, and might reflect increased time spent indoors engaged with electronic entertainment. ... Over the past 4 decades, societal trends suggest that physical activity levels have declined within several key domains.
  • The Campaign for U.S. Ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), ed. (2018). "What is the CRC?". Archived from the original on 9 May 2020.
  • The Campaign for U.S. Ratification of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), ed. (2018). "What is the CRC?". Archived from the original on 9 May 2020. Retrieved 4 April 2025.
  • Greenlaw, Ellen (28 October 2020). "Let them play: Why free play is crucial for kids". BCH Medical Education. Boston Children's Hospital. Retrieved 29 March 2025. Free play is any type of unstructured play that is directed by the child. It helps children develop their imaginations while experiencing and exploring the world around them. Samantha Swankowski, a certified child life specialist at Boston Children's Hospital, says providing time for free play is important, especially for younger kids.
  • Jones, Emily S. (1 October 1967). "Vassar's Own Film Series". Vassar Quarterly. LIII (1). Alumnae/i Association of Vassar College (AAVC). ISSN 0042-2851. p. 12: During the academic year 1966-67 the Film Program engaged in the production of three additional films for Head Start training programs—with more time for planning these. ORGANIZING FREE PLAY and HEAD START TO CONFIDENCE were completed in time for the summer's training programs and over 300 copies of these films were made available along with the earlier Head Start films, for free distribution through Modern Talking Picture Service, Inc.
  • Mader, Jackie (14 November 2022). "Want resilient and well-adjusted kids? Let them play". Hechinger Report. New York: Hechinger Institute on Education and the Media, Columbia University. Retrieved 29 March 2025. Numerous researchers have found play is a natural and critical part of child development. When researchers compared information about [prison] inmates' childhoods with a population outside the prison, they found that the comparison group could provide abundant examples of free play in childhood, while the group inside prison largely could not. ... 'The presence or absence of play, particularly in child development, has a great deal to do with competency, resiliency, emotional health [and] brain size,' [Stuart] Brown said.
  • Moyer, Melinda Wenner (1 May 2016). "Unstructured Play Is Critical to Child Development". Scientific American. Retrieved 29 March 2025. 'Free play,' as scientists call it, is critical for becoming socially adept, coping with stress and building cognitive skills such as problem solving. ... Most psychologists agree that play affords benefits that last through adulthood, but they do not always agree on the extent to which a lack of play harms kids. ... Psychologists worry that limiting free play in kids may result in a generation of anxious, unhappy and socially maladjusted adults. Free play is most similar to play seen in the animal kingdom, suggesting that it has important evolutionary roots.
  • NIFP (2025). "Our Founder - National Institute for Play". National Institute for Play. Retrieved 30 March 2025. The commission was tasked with investigating and understanding what was then the largest such mass murder in U.S. history. ... Ultimately the commission unanimously agreed that the cause of Whitman's killing spree was that his free play had been systematically suppressed by a sadistic, overbearing father.
  • Samuelsson, Ingrid Pramling; Pramling, Niklas (July 2023) [June 2013]. "Play and learning". Encyclopedia on Early Childhood Development (pdf) (revised ed.). CEECD Université de Montréal. Retrieved 2 April 2025.

Further reading

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