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| American Journal of Play | 7 |
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Showing all 7 results
Lillard, Angeline S. – American Journal of Play, 2013
Although Montessori education is often considered a form of playful learning, Maria Montessori herself spoke negatively about a major component of playful learning--pretend play, or fantasy--for young children. In this essay, the author discusses this apparent contradiction: how and why Montessori education includes elements of playful learning…
Descriptors: Play, Montessori Method, Fantasy, Outcomes of Education
Nwokah, Eva; Hsu, Hui-Chin; Gulker, Hope – American Journal of Play, 2013
Play is a major component of early intervention for infants and toddlers with special needs. Many of these children are from low-income families with limited resources. The authors investigate the attitudes, practices, and concerns of early-intervention providers (professionals whose services support young children with developmental disabilities…
Descriptors: Therapy, Early Intervention, Play, Toys
Bodrova, Elena; Germeroth, Carrie; Leong, Deborah J. – American Journal of Play, 2013
The authors consider the analysis of the literature on play research by Lillard and others in the January 2013 "Psychological Bulletin," an analysis that questioned the prevailing assumption of a causal relationship between play and child development, especially in the areas of creativity, reasoning, executive function, and regulation of…
Descriptors: Play, Metacognition, Sociocultural Patterns, Attribution Theory
Roopnarine, Jaipaul L.; Jin, Bora – American Journal of Play, 2012
In this study, the authors use psycho-cultural models of ethnic parental theories and acculturation to look at Indo Caribbean immigrant beliefs concerning the relationship between the amount of time children play and their early academic performance. During home interviews, fifty-seven Indo Caribbean couples offered their opinions about the…
Descriptors: Achievement, Acculturation, Language Skills, Play
Corsaro, William A. – American Journal of Play, 2012
The author looks at children's play from the perspective of interpretive reproduction, emphasizing the way children create their own unique peer cultures, which he defines as a set of routines, artifacts, values, and concerns that children engage in with their playmates. The article focuses on two types of routines in the peer culture of preschool…
Descriptors: Play, Preschool Children, Peer Influence, Cultural Influences
Gray, Peter – American Journal of Play, 2011
From an evolutionary perspective, the normal social play of children involves kids of various ages. Our human and great-ape ancestors most likely lived in small groups with low birth rates, which made play with others of nearly the same age rare. Consequently, the evolutionary functions of children's social play are best understood by examining…
Descriptors: Play, Role Models, Mixed Age Grouping, Age Differences
Roskos, Kathleen; Christie, James – American Journal of Play, 2011
A growing body of research has focused on the role of play in young children's literacy development and early-literacy learning. In reviewing this research, the authors define the play-literacy nexus as that space where play, language, and emerging literacy behaviors converge and interact. They describe findings about the play-literacy nexus…
Descriptors: Play, Emergent Literacy, Young Children, Early Childhood Education

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