U.S. parents' attitudes toward playful learning

C. A. Wright, Josh Pasek, Ji Young Lee, A. S. Masters, R. Golinkoff, Bo Stjerne Thomsen, K. Hirsh-Pasek
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Abstract

There has been a surge of research on the power of play to facilitate learning in recent years. Guided play, specifically, has emerged as an optimal learning approach over free play and direct instruction. However, whether parents' attitudes toward play align with the emerging research remains largely unexplored. Addressing this gap, the present study is the first to operationalize play by using the playful learning spectrum (i.e., free play, guided play, games, and direct instruction) to investigate parents' attitudes toward play.The study surveyed a broad, national sample of parents with at least one child aged 2 to 12 years living in the United States (N = 1,172). To understand preferences for each approach and the factors related to those preferences, we examined how individuals regarded each of the four learning approaches and ran a series of regressions predicting perceptions of learning from the approaches as a function of demographic and attitudinal factors. These regressions were estimated in two different ways, allowing us to identify which predictors were related to each outcome as well as which explained these perceptions uniquely, over and above other predictors.The findings revealed a preference for play over direct instruction, with parents likely to perceive free play as most conducive to learning. Regression analyses uncovered significant variations in perceptions based on demographic and attitudinal factors, with highly educated respondents most likely to endorse free play, more knowledgeable respondents most likely to endorse guided play and the least educated respondents most likely to favor direct instruction.While the study reveals parents' evolving, positive attitudes toward play, it also underscores a gap between academic research, which highlights the advantages of guided play, and parents' perceptions. Implications for parent support initiatives are discussed.
美国家长对游戏式学习的态度
近年来,关于游戏促进学习的力量的研究激增。与自由游戏和直接指导相比,有指导的游戏已成为一种最佳的学习方法。然而,父母对游戏的态度是否与新兴研究相一致,在很大程度上仍未得到探讨。为了弥补这一空白,本研究首次使用游戏性学习谱系(即自由游戏、有指导的游戏、游戏和直接指导)对游戏进行操作化,以调查父母对游戏的态度。本研究对居住在美国、至少有一个 2 至 12 岁孩子的父母进行了广泛的全国性抽样调查(样本数=1172)。为了了解对每种学习方法的偏好以及与这些偏好相关的因素,我们考察了个人对四种学习方法中每种方法的看法,并根据人口统计和态度因素对从这些方法中学习的看法进行了一系列回归预测。这些回归以两种不同的方式进行估算,使我们能够确定哪些预测因素与每种结果相关,以及哪些预测因素能够超越其他预测因素,独特地解释这些看法。研究结果表明,与直接教学相比,家长更喜欢游戏,而自由游戏可能被认为最有利于学习。回归分析揭示了基于人口和态度因素的观念上的显著差异,受过高等教育的受访者最有可能赞同自由游戏,知识更丰富的受访者最有可能赞同有指导的游戏,而受教育最少的受访者最有可能赞同直接指导。这项研究揭示了家长对游戏不断发展的积极态度,同时也强调了强调有指导游戏优势的学术研究与家长观念之间的差距。研究还讨论了家长支持活动的意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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