Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Organized RECESS?


Ask a group of elementary students what their favorite part of the school day is and chances are you’ll likely hear ‘RECESS!’ from a majority of them. Educators agree: recess is an extremely important part of a student’s day. It gives students a chance to cut-loose, run, play creatively and just plain get some energy out. Recess is the time of day when students engage in the majority of their social interactions and, consequently, when the greatest amount of social conflict occurs as well. 

Playworks, a non-profit organization based out of Oakland, California, was developed to help bring structure to recess and therefore reduce the amount of conflict on the playground. Playworks provides what they call a ‘recess coach.’ The ‘recess coach’ helps students to start playground games and encourages everyone to get involved by coming up with creative ways to pick teams, such as by birth month rather than by popularity. If conflicts arise, the ‘recess coach’ also comes up with creative but simple ways to settle disputes as well. A favorite among elementary students is the ever-popular ‘Rock, Paper, Scissors.’ Forty percent of teachers whose schools participate in the Playworks program report that students will often use ‘Rock, Paper, Scissors’ to handle disputes when they come up in the classroom as well.

 A study that was published this week by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation also found that having more structured recess also greatly reduces the amount of time it takes students to transition from recess back into classroom time. Teachers report that students are calmer and more ready to get back to work, then without structured recess.  “Playworks is a pretty common-sense approach” says Nancy Barrand, the foundation’s senior adviser. “It's really about the school environment and how you create a healthy school environment for the children," she continued. "If children are healthy and happy, they learn better."

To learn more about Playworks visit www.playworks.org

No comments:

Post a Comment