Brian Blanco for The New York Times
SARAH WILSON was speaking proudly the other day when she declared: “My house is a little messy.”
Ms. Wilson has embraced a growing movement to restore the sometimes-untidy business of play to the lives of children. Her interest was piqued when she toured her local elementary school last year, a few months before Benjamin was to enroll in kindergarten. She still remembered her own kindergarten classroom from 1985: it had a sandbox, blocks and toys. But this one had a wall of computers and little desks.
“There’s no imaginative play anymore, no pretend,” Ms. Wilson said with a sigh.
For several years, studies and statistics have been mounting that suggest the culture of play in the United States is vanishing. Children spend far too much time in front of a screen, educators and parents lament — 7 hours 38 minutes a day on average, according to a survey by the Kaiser Family Foundation last year. And only one in five children live within walking distance (a half-mile) of a park or playground, according to a 2010 report by the federal Centers for Disease Control, making them even less inclined to frolic outdoors.
Read the rest of the article here.
This blog informs the public about information key to pediatric specialists in the Houston and East Texas area. Dr. Rotenberg serves as the editor. Independent MD/PhD pediatric specialists are invited to participate. These physician specialists welcome patients who require attention. This blog will be relevant if you want to learn more about an illness affecting a child, teen or young adult.
Houston Area Pediatric Specialists
Independent pediatric specialists aim to serve our community. We want to share news and analysis regarding our specialties and our practices.
Thursday, February 24, 2011
Effort to Restore Children’s Play Gains Momentum
Labels:
development,
Houston,
pediatric,
specialist
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment