Children's perspectives of learning through play in the majority world: Findings from Bangladesh, Colombia and Uganda

IF 1.4 3区 社会学 Q2 SOCIAL WORK
Nikhit D'Sa, Sue Robson, Angela Pyle, Jennifer M. Zosh, Kazi Ferdous Pavel, Carolina Maldonado-Carreno, Eduardo Escallon Largacha, Martin Ariapa, Mauro Giacomazzi, Rachel Hatch, Carina Omoeva
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Abstract

As efforts to use learning through play (LtP) expand globally, it is important to explore how children's perspectives impact the efficacy and experience of this pedagogical approach. LtP has been conceptualized as a spectrum from free play to guided play to teacher-directed play. This spectrum describes different ways in which play happens—with varying levels of adult support—and acknowledges that children's agency is characterized by choice and the ability to direct, participate in, and/or initiate play. Previous research has primarily focused on adult perceptions of LtP for preschool children in high-resource contexts. We present the perspectives on LtP of children (3–12 years) in Bangladesh, Colombia and Uganda. We photographed learning activities in community centres and schools that incorporated play-based practices. In group discussions, we used these photographs to elicit children's perspectives on the difference between play and learning in the classroom, the factors that influence their construction of play and learning, and the role that teachers play in these activities. Conceptualizations across the three research sites and ages were similar: Children associated learning with play if the activity was fun and social; distinctions between play and learning were defined by content, modality, materials and location; and teachers were seen as involved in play under limited conditions. We discuss the implications of our findings for the implementation of LtP in majority-world contexts. By moving teachers from a primarily teacher-directed approach to more guided-play approaches, we are not only asking teachers to give up some control but are also asking children to think about adults in fundamentally different ways. This research highlights that we may need to couple professional development for teachers with approaches that support children to change their perceptions of agency and choice in the classroom.

大多数国家儿童通过游戏学习的观点:来自孟加拉国、哥伦比亚和乌干达的调查结果
随着在游戏中学习(LtP)在全球范围内的推广,探索儿童的观点如何影响这种教学方法的效果和体验是很重要的。LtP被定义为一个范围,从自由游戏到指导游戏再到教师指导游戏。这个谱系描述了游戏发生的不同方式——在不同程度的成人支持下——并承认儿童能动性的特点是选择和指导、参与和/或发起游戏的能力。以前的研究主要集中在成人对高资源环境下学龄前儿童LtP的看法。我们提出了对孟加拉国、哥伦比亚和乌干达儿童(3-12岁)LtP的观点。我们拍摄了社区中心和学校的学习活动,其中包括以游戏为基础的实践。在小组讨论中,我们使用这些照片来引出孩子们对课堂上游戏和学习的区别的看法,影响他们构建游戏和学习的因素,以及教师在这些活动中扮演的角色。三个研究地点和年龄的概念是相似的:如果活动有趣和社交,儿童会将学习与玩耍联系起来;游戏和学习的区别是由内容、形式、材料和地点决定的;教师被认为在有限的条件下参与游戏。我们讨论了我们的研究结果对在多数世界背景下实施LtP的影响。通过将教师从主要的教师指导方法转变为更多的引导游戏方法,我们不仅要求教师放弃一些控制,而且要求孩子们以根本不同的方式思考成人。这项研究强调,我们可能需要将教师的专业发展与支持儿童改变他们对课堂代理和选择的看法的方法结合起来。
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来源期刊
Children & Society
Children & Society SOCIAL WORK-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
17.60%
发文量
125
期刊介绍: Children & Society is an interdisciplinary journal publishing high quality research and debate on all aspects of childhood and policies and services for children and young people. The journal is based in the United Kingdom, with an international range and scope. The journal informs all those who work with and for children, young people and their families by publishing innovative papers on research and practice across a broad spectrum of topics, including: theories of childhood; children"s everyday lives at home, school and in the community; children"s culture, rights and participation; children"s health and well-being; child protection, early prevention and intervention.
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