Playful structure: a novel image of early years pedagogy for primary school classrooms
Journal ArticleAbstract
Playful structure is a new pedagogic image representing a more balanced and integrated perspective on early years pedagogy, aiming to blend apparent dichotomies and contradictions and to sustain and evolve play-based practice beyond Year 1. Playful structure invites teachers and children to initiate and maintain a degree of playfulness in the child’s whole learning experience, even when the learning intentions demand a supportive structure. Thus, playfulness becomes characteristic of the interaction between adult and the child and not just characteristic of child-initiated versus adult-initiated activities, or of play-time versus task-time. The paper is based on intensive observations and interviews with teachers in Northern Ireland who participated in a play-based and informal curriculum. This paper explains how playful structure rests on complementary processes of infusion of structure into play-based activities and infusion of playfulness into more structured activities, illustrated by cameos. ‘Infusion’ suggests the subtle blending process that allows apparent dichotomies and contradictions to be resolved in practice.
Output Information
Glenda Walsh, Liz Sproule, Carol McGuinness & Karen Trew (2011) Playful structure: a novel image of early years pedagogy for primary school classrooms, Early Years, 31:2, 107-119, DOI: 10.1080/09575146.2011.579070Published Output URL: https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09575146.2011.579070