My Free publications on Childs Play

 

 

This page contains the following online publications on the subject of Childrens Play.

 

 

"CHILDRENS ORGANISED PLAY PROVISION IN THE uk"

 

-Tells the story of the development of play provision from post war to present times.

 

"THE HISTORY of CHILDS PLAY"

 

An account of the history of childrens play from biblical times.

 

 

 

                          
         
                                              

     

   

 CHILDRENS PLAY PROVISION IN THE UNITED KINGDOM

 

The history of the child play movement in the U.K is short, for generations of children play was condemned by adults as an intrusion into their world of work and leisure. For up until the 19th Century, once a small child had grown out of the nappy stage and could walk, the child was expected to play an active role in family life and all associated activities within the family unit. Childhood as a vocation, was not recognised as having any value, special attention, or provision.

 

In 1385, the Bishop of London complained of children playing around St. Pauls and later in 1447 the Bishop of Exeter also complained of children playing within the church cloisters during services. An Italian visitor to England remarked in his 'Revelations' of the late 15th Century.

 

"The want of affection in the English, is directly manifested towards their children."  " For often having kept them at home till they arrive at the age of 7 or 8 years, or 9 at the utmost". " They put them out to hard service in the houses of other people, binding them for another 7 or 9 years". In London, a Beadle was employed to whip children away from the Royal exchange.  (Dorset) who saw the threat to the play of children, with the decline of natural play places. As he indicated in his visionary poem entitled ; "The Lane". In 1910 Robert Owen operated special day nurseries at his New Lanark Mills;  

 

 It was however the teacher, writer and visionary William Barnes of Dorchester who warned of the future of children if theeir play spaces were lost to the cars and house building.

 

  Whilst church groups and others like the Childrens Holiday Fund and Fresh Air Fund, provided trips out to country areas for city children and other activity groups. These included the Childrens Happy Evening Association, Band of Hope and Salvation Army activities.

 

Robert Baden-Powell operated the very first boys scout camp on Brownsea Island at Poole in Dorset, thereby forming the Scout Association in 1907.

 

Nearby at Shaftesbury (Dorset) Homer Lane had established the first free school in the U.K, which was called "The Little Commonwealth'.

 

This influenced Coldwell Cook with his book entitled, 'The Free Way', which was originally published in 1917.

 

Homer Lane with his Little Commonwealth School in Shaftesbury, had recognised the importance of free play in 1913, stating that ;

 

 "The child in the playground was not the same child who came to school, resourceful and purposeful, all qualities apparent in his spontaneous play". In later years A.S.Neil had opened his free school Summerhill.

 

 It was via The Royal Charter of 1925, which established the National Playing Fields Association N.P.F.A, (National Playing Fields Association) allowed them to become the only body specifically responsible for the development of play, playgrounds and recreational grounds nationally within the U.K.

 

It is only through the extraordinary work of the N.P.F.A, that organised child's play and the facilities of play have grown and become established. Many of the forerunners of childrens charities were established at their offices in Playfield House.

 

Voluntary organisations and play organisations were the subject of national campaigns aimed at the setting up and delivery of such community projects. With the help of grant aid, resources and specialist know how, facilities for all ages and abilities including disabled children. Along with safety standards of play provision which were set in stone. This was indeed the largest step so far taken, (all very long overdue) Nevertheless, things were now definitely happening for the sake of the children.

 

By this time a national conscience was aroused and the state itself accepted some responsibility for child welfare, more specifically regarding child protection.

 

However, it was left to the voluntary sector to monitor the play needs of children. There was previously at that time little in the way of national recreational provision until 1925, when the N.P.F.A was founded.

                                                                                                                             

Pictures of Children playing on the streets and bombed sites of the city.

 

  Long before World War Two, the Danish Architect J.H. Sorenson had a vision of how children could best play, freely and imaginatively. He presented his views within his own personal blueprint document entitled "Open Spaces for Town and Country".

Sorenson wrote in 1913,

"That perhaps we should set up waste material playgrounds in suitable large areas, where children could play with old cars, boxes and timber".

 
For a brilliant article with extraordiny pictures of adventure playgrounds nationally, visit. 
 

 The Farmers in his den

 

 In later years, the adventure playgrounds were to meet these needs, places where children could express their efforts spontaneously.

There are many factors that led to the birth of adventure play, but none so important as the psychological theories of childhood which emerged in the 1930's. These new ideas about childhood and play entered the mainstream culture and began to affect politics, town planning and child care practices.

 

Within this climate of innovation Carl Theodor Sørensen a landscape designer and Hans Dragehjelm a school teacher, created their Family and Children's Park proposal. For several years both men had been interested in designing and building appropriate play spaces for the children of Copenhagen.

 

Sørensen and Dragehjelm thought that natural play was the ideal play and worked best in natural and rural surroundings. Sørensen was not an opponent of playground equipment, but he wanted it limited to see-saws, swings and sand-boxes. He had long observed that the children in his area were attracted to playing on construction sites and not on the conventional playgrounds. They appeared excited by the endless possibilities that the construction site offered them in creating their own adventures. In a journal article in 1935 Sørensen wrote:

 

"Finally we should probably at some point experiment with what one could call a junk playground. I am thinking in terms of an area, not too small in size, well closed off from its surroundings by thick greenery, where we should gather, for the amusement of bigger children, all sorts of old scrap that the children from the apartment blocks could be allowed to work with, as the children in the countryside and in the suburbs already have".

 

"There could be branches and waste from tree polling and bushes, old cardboard boxes, planks and boards, "dead" cars, old tyres and lots of other things, which would be a joy for healthy boys to use for something". "Of course it would look terrible, and of course some kind of order would have to be maintained; but I believe that things would not need to go radically wrong with that sort of situation. If there were really a lot of space, one is tempted to imagine tiny little kindergartens, keeping hens and the like, but it would at all events require an interested adult supervisor..."

 

Sørensen's junk playground eventually became the first ever adventure playground in the deprived area of Emdrup, Copenhagen. It was opened in August 1943 as part of a housing project with 719 large-family households and was an immediate success. At Emdrup nothing was static or expensive. It was filled with junk - wood, rope, canvas, tires, wire, bricks, pipes, rocks, nets, logs, balls, abandoned furniture, wheels, vehicles, and an unimaginable assortment of other things.  The first playleader of the Emdrup adventure playground was John Bertelsen who wrote in an article in 1946 stating:  

 

"The adventure playground is an attempt to give the city child a substitute for the play and development potential it has lost as the city has become a place where there is no space for the child's imagination and play".

 "Access to all building sites is forbidden to unauthorized persons, there are no trees where the children can climb and play Tarzan. The railway station grounds and the common, where they used to be able to fight great battles and have strange adventures, do not exist any more. No! It is now not easy to be a child in the city when you feel the urge to be a caveman or a bushman".

 

There are many factors that led to the birth of adventure play, but none so important as the psychological theories of childhood which had emerged earlier in the 1930's. These new ideas about childhood and play entered the mainstream culture and began to affect politics, town planning and child care practices. 

 

   In a publication entitled Planning for Play , Lady Allen of Hurtwood wrote,

 

 "Adventure playgrounds are significantly different from one another".  "For they are influenced by the community, the nature of the site, the wishes of the children, the imaginations of the leader and the amount of money available".

 Lady Marjorie Allen was originally Chair of the Nursery Association and founder of the;Under Fourteen Council, later to be known as Save The Children Fund.

 

 They published their report on childrens play in 1943, which was entitled; Play Space for Children.  It was due to her work that the Curtis Commission was formed which led to the 1948 Childrens Act.

 

 

LADY ALLEN 

 

It was the N.P.F.A through its national officers and work over the years led by Lord Luke, Lady Marjorie Allen, Mary Nicholson, Drummond Abernethy and the N.P.F.A's numerous retired officers from the armed services, who pioneered and developed play work initiatives nationally.

 

This radical step forward, led to the development of numerous national play projects and campaigns in the U.K. Thereby ensuring that childs play was taken seriously by government bodies and local authorities in the years ahead.  Lord Luke of the N.P.F.A along with Lady Allen of Hurtwood spearheaded the initial and crucial meetings at N.P.F.A's headquarters in Play Field House. (London) To promote the development and growth of adventure playgrounds in the U.K.

 

Following an article in the Times newspaper on the subject of juvenile crime in 1951, the N.P.F.A offered grant aid for the first two experimental adventure playgrounds. Lord Luke was appointed by the N.P.F.A as the Chair of such a play committee in 1951.Then by 1954 the N.P.F.A had their own published guidelines on the development of playgrounds, courtesy of Mary Nicholson, which were specifically based on the development of Adventure Playgrounds. Initial meetings of the newly formed Pre-School Play Association were also held at Play Field House.

 

Adventure Playground emerged from movements in 1960s Europe that worked to reclaim derelict urban spaces, many caused by the devastation of World War II. Filled with trash and debris, the sites were considered unfit even for parking cars and were therefore abandoned by developers. However, children had no qualms about these forbidden sites, often playing happily in rubble heaps. They seemed to prefer the informality of dirt and scraps to formal jungle gyms. Eventually parents and park designers realized that these non-traditional materials inspired creative, thoughtful play. The adults and children worked together to construct the kinds of play spaces the children wanted.

 The playgrounds they built were not just play spaces; they were fodder for studies by child psychologists. Proponents for Adventure Playgrounds claimed that the play environment they provided would help kids retain resilient and positive world-views. Adventure Playgrounds continually proved the value of learning experiences outside of school. Children could use the playground for exploring many real-life activities (and even the imagined ones). Many of the constructions were clubhouse-type buildings that fostered elaborate games of pretend. Other equipment was designed for children to create multi-media art projects.

 

British supporter Lady Allen of Hurtwood went so far as to argue that giving children opportunities to collectively play at cooking, building, and creating would work to eradicate those destructive energies that might lead some urban youth into delinquency.

 

Landscape design innovator and father of the Adventure Playground, M. Paul Friedberg confirms, “Our problem is that We want the child to be living in a padded box. But a child has to have the real world, fraught with challenges to overcome.” 

 

Friedberg’s conviction seems to have held true in England, as full-time employees staffed each adventure playground to oversee creative activities and aid in the general upkeep of the materials. The playgrounds’ need for heavy community involvement and much maintenance would later figure into their demise.

 

IN THE USA

 

Meanwhile in the United States, the movement caught on quickly. Adventure Playgrounds sprouted up in locations all over the New York, predominantly in Manhattan. The new layouts updated the 1930s playground’s repertoire of metal swings and sandboxes. New ways of thinking about play space became fashionable, with prominent architects such as Louis Kahn and Isamu Noguchi’s proposing designs for Riverside Park. Adventure playground builders designed with natural materials to integrate the play area into the land itself. The playgrounds “fit” in the colors of the materials used: stone, concrete, wood, metal, sand. Adventure playgrounds in New York City more often contained innovative shapes for kids to climb in and around rather than raw building materials as in the European sites. Federal regulations with high standards on safety stifled the use of rougher materials in playgrounds.

Many parents began to worry about the possibility of injury in the tunnels and massive play shapes that blocked visibility of their children at play. Others felt the constructions should be preserved as landmarks, especially the ones designed by famous architects. Soon adventure equipment lost out to colorful catalog models with less sand and fewer moving parts. “Times change,” Commissioner Henry J. Stern proclaimed.

   (Reproduction of a Parks Department historical sign. Reprinted with permission).

 

 In 1948 Drummond Abernethy was appointed as the secretary of the Childrens and Play leadership Department of The National Playing Fields Association Playground Committee.

 

Shortly after in 1950 the NPFA through Pathe News distributed the following film highlighting the need for play provision.

 

 

 Drummond's energy and vision led to the establishment of other projects and played a significant role in refining Sørenson's ideas into adventure play. The name change from junk to adventure play was designed to create a more positive public image but it also marked Drummond's extension of the original philosophy. Drummond and Lady Allen together are widely viewed as the two most important figures in the development of adventure play in Britain. These early adventure playgrounds tended to be run with extremely limited resources and to be short lived due to lack of funds, loss of site or lack of local support. Lessons were learnt and the London Adventure Playground Association (LAPA) was established.

 

Eventually a number of playgrounds were set up on permanent sites with adequate funding. This funding was increasingly provided by the local authorities, who had come to recognize the value of such facilities. By 1973 when i was managing Pin Green adventure playground in Stevenage Herts, sixty one such playgrounds had been established across the country.

 

Adventure playgrounds for the handicaaped or disabled.

 

Despite these remarkable developments adventure playgrounds were still failing to meet the needs of one important group of children -  those with disabilities. To fill this gap, a number of holiday schemes were set up in conjunction with the Cheyne Centre in Chelsea
. The success of this venture fuelled enthusiasm for an adventure playground where children with disabilities could learn through free play. In February 1970 the Handicapped Adventure Playground Association (HAPA) opened its first playground in Chelsea. H.A.P.A opened a further 5 adventure playgrounds across North, West and South London. In the 1990’s, H.A.P.A had changed its name to KidsActive and more recently merged with another charity KIDS. 

 

Whilst working with local playgroups, Mrs Diana Casswell first had the idea that certain children she was working with would benefit from adventure play. From this idea Diana Casswell, along with her husband Reverend Peter Casswell, set about starting the first adventure playground for children with disabilities outside of inner London. From the beginning, a group of committed and experienced people joined the management committee to see the creation of ELHAP. The first major hurdle was to find a suitable site for an adventure playground and by September 1976 negotiations had been completed with the charity Barnardo's for use of this site. Work to adapt it began immediately. A workable area had to be fenced off, structures and play facilities built and pathways laid. Indoor adaptations also had to be made including additional toilet accommodation together with provision for wet weather activities.

 

In the summer of 1977 ELHAP opened, being well used from the start and as facilities and awareness grew the playground became increasingly popular. Within a short time of opening demand was such that a timetable of use had to be created to allow all the users to regularly visit. Without the dedication and determination of the Casswells and the other founding members, ELHAP could never have existed. 

 

 From its first days ELHAP was fortunate in having the support of Drummond Abernethy. Drummond lived locally in Loughton and always had a particularly keen interest in ELHAP. Upon his retirement from the National Playing Fields Association in 1978 Drummond became chairman of ELHAP. This was a position he retained until ill health forced him to stand down in 1986, although he remained on the executive committee until his death. A large part of ELHAP's success is attributed to Drummond Abernethy. Under Drummonds guidance ELHAP developed into a thriving playground and its unique experiences have now been enjoyed by many thousands of children with disabilities.Since 1977 ELHAP has offered adventure play opportunities to children and young people with disabilities from the local area. It remains one of only seven specialist playgrounds in the South East of England, but is regarded by its supporters as the most unique and magical of all the adventure playgrounds.

 

Drummond Abernethy, with his wealth of adventure play experience, used to describe ELHAP as the "very best adventure playground for children with special needs".

 

Numerous other play campaigns over the years ahead were to include ; The Lollipop Brigade; for improved nursery education, supported and led by Mary Bruce of the P.P.A, (Pre-School Play Association) who was to attend regular play meetings held at Play Field House. (which I also attended)

 

The Fair Play For Children campaign.

 

 

The Bishop appealed for massive support nationally to provide space and facilities whereby children could play safely. Subsequently his appeal was reflected by the intervention of the N.P.F.A, because of this intervention an action group was formed by the Bishop. Organisations and individuals nationally became involved in play provision, they worked together to mount a new campaign entitled 'Fair Play for Children', which is still operating to this day as a play pressure group.

 

One of the major events that led to the encouragement and growth of play with leadership, was due to one instance alone, which was to highlight the overwhelming need for play provision for children. Such a change in fortune was highlighted in a letter to the Times Newspaper in July of 1972, written by the Rev Trevor Huddleston, who was then the Bishop of Stepney in London. It had been revealed that a young lad and friend of the bishop had tragically drowned in the Regents Canal in London.  
 
 The Thurrock Diploma in playleadership course.

These two distinct areas of child play, that of play leadership and the adventure play work movement, came together alongside a full time course at Thurrock College. Plus other comparative courses at Kennington College (London) and Stockport Technical College. Many other training courses followed in later years, all spearheaded by the N.P.F.A  

 

St Johns wood Adventure Playground 1963

 

 

Initially the N.P.F.A achieved much, to draw attention to the provision of recreational playing fields for the physical and mental welfare of the nation. Subsequently a Royal Charter incorporated this provision in 1933. Around this time the first U.K. adventure playground experiment was created at Morden (Wimbledon) in the back garden of a local ladies home. (Years later in I973 I was shown an album of pictures by this very lady when she visited the Pin Green Adventure Playground in Stevenage,  when i was Pin Greens playground Manager.
 
  Drummond Abernethy

 

In 1965 Drummond advocated that "Special pavilions needed to be built in parks for children,that recreation grounds should be within half a mile radius from a child home and that schools and other provisions should open during the evening, weekends and during school holidays."

 

My early influences of play leadership occurred after reading a National Playing Fields Association booklet entitled ; Play Leadership; this was written by Drummond Abernethy. Drummond was the secretary of the play leadership department of the N.P.F.A. based at Play Field House).

 

Peter a student with C.S.V Community Service Volunteer and personal friend. Told me of new playgrounds where kids could create and destroy walls, build and light fires and do all manners of things which children normally couldnt do. And of his friend Drummond Abernethy.

I found the idea and concept of such playgrounds very intriguing and exciting and I wanted to know more. With the help of N.P.F.A literature which I loaned entitled Adventure Playgrounds and Playleadership.

 

Extract ,"The object of recreation is not taken seriously enough, especially by planners and architects, it tended to be left to the end of any scheme to use up what land was left, when other needs were satisfied."

 

"It was up to the architect to point the way to improving things, planners must learn how children live, how they develop and plan accordingly ". 

" These play places must be near home and if there is no traffic segregation,there must be some form of leadership".

 

" If action is not taken not only will childrens development be retarded,but they will in all likelihood turn to anti-social activities"-  Drummond Abernethy - Director of the Play Leadership Department / National Playing Fields Association".

 

( An extract from Town and Country Publication 1965).

 

  The philosophy particularly interested me, having gained first hand personal experiences within my own childhood upbringing and through later informal youth group experiences and settings. The readings of these books written by Drummond Abernethy and my later friendship with him at Play Field House and throughout the next thirty years. Were to be instrumental in my grasp of the important values and philosophy of childs play work, the discipline and the profession.

 

Drummond was to influence many within the field of play throughout these decades. His contribution to childs play was profound in every respect; he was unique and highly respected. Drummond was a distinguished gentleman, silver haired and always immaculately dressed, as well as being a superb orator and spokesman for the play profession. Talks that he carried out in his capacity as Director within the UK and also on the continent, were always high in substance, as well as being both informative and exactly executed.

                                                              

All children need to play, to make a mess, to play with sand and water, to cut out shapes, colour pictures, make models, play instruments, dress up and to join with their peers in the singing of rhymes and jingles, playing on slides, in wendy houses and similar pursuits. These activities were always under the watchful eye and caring supervision of fully trained professional staff, whom the children could turn to for help, advice, support and comfort. Children need such adults around to read them stories, sing with them, to organise activities and to make such play environments, safe and interesting. Places such as nurseries, playgroups, play schemes and adventure playgrounds, alongside the modern after school kids club networks. These are all ideal havens for such activities.

 

The history of childs play provision, particularly pre-school play, has its roots in the UK with the pioneering work of people like the Macmillan Sisters, Mary Bruce and Lady Veronica Plowden. (The Plowden Report) As well as Dr. Ron Faulkner with his very successful Opportunity Classes and Toy Libraries.

 

The Pre-School Play Association, Save The Children Fund, N.S.P.C.C, Council for Children;s Welfare, Dr. Barnardo;s, Elrida Rathbone Society and the Child Minding Research and Development Group.

 All helped to establish a variety of projects for children nationally. They were all encouraged by the earlier work of the National Playing Fields Association with its many sub-groups and committees.

 

The very first local authority pre-school play provision scheme was the Greater London Councils 1'O Clock Clubs, which were held in london parks. Such schemes were eventually to operate nation-wide.

 

Bill McCulloch an early pioneer for the G.L.C was later to develop adventure playgrounds at Sands End adventure playground and Weaver Field adventure playground and worked for both L.A.P.A. (London Adventure Playgrounds Association) and the N.P.F.A. 

 

In 1937 the Physical Training and Recreation Act, had made grants available for the first time through the Board of Education. Two years later in I939, a national advisory body was established alongside a government circular (no.1486) which saw their involvement in leisure time provision. This was the start of the partnership between the statutory authorities and the voluntary sector in leisure provision. During this period, of the 4 million young people between the ages of 14 to 20 years, only 500,000 or one in eight were actually involved in any voluntary leisure organisation at that time.

 

One of the very first attempts to provide community based organised activities for the whole family including play provision was The Peckham Experiment; in London, which ran from 1935 to 1939. Later studies in 1945, by H. Pearce and Lucy A. Crockets stated that ;

"The child has no wish to be relegated to a world of its own. The world of its parents or grown ups is a mystery and enticement to it, and as it grows it longs to share in it more and more".

 

In present times, with well more than 1 Million single parent families in the UK, the need for good quality play provision is obvious, in no way can it be ignored. Providing sound play provision has so many obvious advantages, by helping to develop a child's range of physical, social, motor, creative abilities and skills. Such skills develop faster when children play with others and have a variety of adults around them to assist them in their playtimes. It is also of great value to parents, providing them with much needed breaks from the pressure involved in bringing up young children, as well as opportunities to take up employment.

 

A great deal of recent research, undertaken in the United States, has shown that such provision, particularly with very young children, can pay for itself, with the prevention of future funding for special needs of children, within specially earmarked educational classes.

 

Junk Playgrounds.

 

The history of the adventure playground and play work movement, originated through a number of events during and shortly after the war years. J.H. Sorenson the architect had a dream of a junk playground, in which children could create their own play environment. This vision became a reality in 1943, in Emdrupt (Copenhagen
) with the first junk playground.

 

The Emdrupt playground contained basic play materials of waste, junk of all kinds, such as old cars, packing cases, bricks, water and bare earth. The adventure playground was ideal for its purpose, in which children could explore and experience the joys of their own creations, playing with a variety of treasures such as wood, stone, earth, water and sand to the modern linolium. All things of which were discarded from society as being of waste; thus the adventure playground was to become the child;s workshop for activities of construction and inventiveness.

 

This ideal held immense fascination for Lady Marjorie Allen of Hurtwood, Chair of the Nursery Association who visited the Emdrupt Junk Playground in 1945. Sorenson the architect and planner of this project himself remarked that ;the ugliest, yet for me it is the best and most beautiful of all my works.

 

During the war years, a variety of play schemes were operated in the london underground which for many families were safe havens from the bombing . Society had become aware that children were the raw materials of the race, and that the childhood years had a direct and crucial effect on the development of personality.

 

 

Lady Allen of Hurtwood

(1897-1976)

 

"Better a broken bone than a broken spirit"

 

 

During the war (1939 – 1945), she organised teams of skilled craftsmen to work with many voluntary groups in making stout toys and nursery equipment out of remnants from bomb sites. 

Lady Allen fought to give women a choice to work or stay at home for the first two years of a child’s life.

 

In the 1943 Education White Paper, Lady Allen fought hard, through lobbying members of parliament and via the press, to make nursery provision for three to five year olds statutory rather than permissive, within primary education.  Within the 1944 Education Act, it was stated that local education authorities had a duty to provide nursery education as part of the primary phase. Alas, since then, in many local authorities, when finances were limited, nursery provision was sacrificed as it was not compulsory. Young children and their families suffered. In order to overcome this deficiency, Lady Allen realised the need to combine health, social services and education at national and local levels in a joint ’Ministry of Children’. Then there would be less likelihood for unfortunate children to slip through the net. Until 2004 children’s services have been fragmented, but now there is hope for more integrated services, many based in new ‘Children’s Centres’ (2006).

 

Lady Allen created beautiful gardens, and from 1939 to 1946 was Vice-president the Institute of Landscape Architects. Her burning ambition was to make gardens and adventure playgrounds for British children, as she had seen in Scandinavia. This she undertook with great vigour, lobbying those in power to gain financial and practical support . Many of her inner city playgrounds continue to function, once under the aegis of the Playground Association and the International Association for the Child’s Right to Play. The outdoor play areas attached to nursery schools and children’s centres display the genius of Lady Allen in using space and materials in aesthetically pleasing ways.

 

In 1945/’48 there were many young children and their families misplaced across Europe. Lady Allen, together with Alva Myrdal of Sweden and Suzanne Herbiniere-Lebert of France, worked hard to create OMEP: The World Organisation for Early Childhood Education: intended for all who are involved with children up to the age of eight. It was a tremendous challenge: to involve the leaders of early childhood activities in many countries, with different regimes and approaches. Lady Allen created the first draft constitution, with the help of UNESCO colleagues. The first O.M.E.P World Assembly, with sixteen countries represented, was at Charles University, Prague, immediately following a world seminar arranged by UNESCO.

 

From 1949 onwards Lady Allen worked for UNICEF (United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund) as a liaison officer and travelled extensively to see projects in very poor communities. Her OMEP work took her to Scandinavia and the USA, where she undertook lecture tours on the fundamentals of good early years provision, and learnt more of the value of adventure play facilities for children.

Lady Allen’s contribution to early childhood care and education in Britain and across the world has been inestimable. The implementation of her ideas in effective practice has enriched the lives of generations of children and of those who work with them.

 

Taken from the World Organisation for Early Childhood Education.

 

  "They are decidedly messy occupations and they make the planners who are mostly tidied minded unhappy". 

 "Nevertheless, they must never forget children enjoy being dirty and untidy, adults abhor it, we have to decide whether we are to make playgrounds for children, or playgrounds that please the planners".

 

Shortly after, on her return to the uk

 

"It is a rewarding experience for children to take and to overcome risks, to learn to use lethal tools with safety". 

 

  Lady Marjorie Allen formed the Under 14 Council; which was to be known in later years as The Save The Children Fund.By 1946, local councils were campaigning strongly for play, in particular for adventure playgrounds in the UK. By 1951 the N.P.F.A had itself formed a committee lead by Lord Luke, to look into the matter, following Lady Allen;s public platform via a Times article on juvenile crime. London), various play schemes operated. These were the first attempts at play provision in the UK.

 

 Lady Allen responded to the article, she wrote ;"that municipal playgrounds were often as bleak as barrack squares and just as boring".

 "You are not allowed to build fires". "You will head for a juvenile court if you started to dig the expensive asphalt to make a cave".  "There are no bricks or planks to build a house, no workshop for carpentry, mechanical work, painting or modelling and of course no trees to climb".

 

In 1948 grant aid was at last made available for voluntary bodies working with children, many local authorities sought ways to tackle rising youth delinquency. A variety of solutions were put forward, including that of play with leadership, some councils provided recreational activities in the parks. These were set up to take kids off the streets, which were seen as menacing, unsafe and breeding grounds for delinquency. In councils like Wandsworth and Peckham (

 

As the interest and support for play schemes and the development of adventure playgrounds expanded within city environments, the N.P.F.A and others campaigned for play. The only planned and or designated play areas, were the council controlled playing fields, recreation grounds, parks, hard tarmac and concrete surfaced swing parks. However the vast majority of children didn;t even have access to many of these facilities, due in the main to increased traffic congested streets and busy roads which put limits on the child's journey.

 

By 1955, as a result of the growing interest in adventure play and the success of a number of London adventure playgrounds that were supported by the N.P.F.A, the idea of play with leadership was beginning to gain public support. In that same year, the Lollard Street Adventure Playground (Lambeth-London) opened for the first time. A king George Jubilee Trust report entitled;Citizens of Tomorrow; stated that; "children commit more offences on the streets than in other places where children can play safely".

Two major pieces of important government documentation were to influence the future of child;s play in the 1960;s. These being the 1963 Children and Young Persons Act which extended the powers of local authorities to promote the welfare of children and the Seebohm Report of 1968, both of which pointed the way ahead.

 

At the Lambeth Adventure Playground (London) during the early part of the 1960's when a sand pit was introduced to the site for use by the small children, the authorities were amazed to see that older teenage girls were making sand pies.  In such areas children had been deprived of natural early play experiences and were obviously catching up in the later years of their development, before moving on to new play experiences deemed more suited to their age. Following these sand play experiences, the girls had at last discovered the educational aspects of the properties of sand. Where adventure play was introduced into urban areas, such occurrences were usual, frequent and very necessary.

 

In 1965 Drummond Abernethy of the N.P.F.A remarked in Town and Country Planning, 

  " Children and teenagers are not delinquent, but the products of what we have done to them when they were small".  "Moreover, this is a period when the sanctions have been thrown overboard and when teenagers are strong and virile group with little to do with their ample leisure".  " Recreation must fulfil their needs, if action is not taken not only will a child's development suffer,but also they will in all likelihood turn to anti social activities".

Lady Allen after her first visit to Emdrupt stated that ; "It was like a revelation, I knew in the first instance of seeing it, they had hit on something tremendously important". Lady Marjory Allen of Hurtwood was an able, strong and forthright advocate for children: she strove to overcome injustice and championed children’s rights, particularly for orphans, the disabled and the deprived. In Britain she was a leader of many organisations, striving to improve conditions for children, and later worked with U.N.E.S.C.O and U.N.I.C.E.F on international projects. She was a founder leader of L’Organisation Mondiale Pour L’Education Prescolaire’, OMEP, and her high level international contacts brought great benefits to early years provision in Britain.

 

  THE FUTURE OF CHILDS PLAY. 

 

 

                                                                            

 

           

"We dont stop playing because we grow old".

 

"We grow old because we stop playing"- George Bernard Shaw.

 

COME OUT TO PLAY.

 

 

Girls and boys, come out to play,

The moon doth shine as bright as day;

Leave your supper, and leave your sleep,

And come with your playfellows into the street.

Come with a whoop, come with a call,

Come with a good will or not at all.

Up the ladder and down the wall,

A half-penny roll will serve us all.

You find milk, and I'll find flour,

And we'll have a pudding in half an hour.

 

 The need for all kinds of provision for all ages of children, from nurseries to full time play centres, has become more apparent during recent years. This has been due to the increasing demand of mothers, many of whom have returned to the work place. Play places such as the work place nursery and crèche facilities are becoming more popular, as an important factor in the moves to enable women to fully participate in the employment market.  As well as additional facilities in sport recreation and leisure related interests often within educational establishments. 

 

 Such provision has become a growth area, providing a positive step forward into the new millennium by investing in the child of today and ultimately the adult of tomorrow.  However, according to a recent report by the National Union of Teachers, such facilities are still badly needed. With less than 1 in 4 of children under 5 years of age, catered for within the present mix of local government, voluntary and commercial nursery provision. Therefore it is imperative that all manner and variety of children’s provision is promoted and encouraged, from nurseries to play centres for older children, which should all be seen as of a necessity and in-turn invaluable to all.

 

The children of today are our future; the play facilities of children need to be made available to children of all ages, from the pre school nursery child to the young adolescent. Such integral play facilities, if encouraged and promoted, will indeed play a very crucial role towards the development of the child’s mind, and physical well being right through to adulthood and beyond.

 

As child’s play grew in influence particularly amongst the authorities and the planners, it was soon to become apparent that changes were necessary in the actual construction, siteing and styles of provision.  The log styled type of playgrounds of the 1970’s era, which became so popular in the new towns housing development areas were soon to replace the early adventure playgrounds, or those known as junk playgrounds, as they were once called. This primarily was due to specific concerns relating to safety standards, the height of play structures, dangers of falls and the daily use by children of what were considered by many as dangerous tools.

 Due to these concerns and the national campaigns into safety on playgrounds, new safety guidelines were introduced. It was therefore, as a consequence of such developments that such play activities on adventure playgrounds were to be gradually phased out.

 

As one of the pioneers of play leadership, Bernard McGovern, was quick to point out in his book ‘Play Leadership’. (1973)

 

 "Many of these playgrounds now consist of mammoth man made constructions such as forts, towers, giant slides, tunnels, tree houses, buildings with all modern conveniences and in some cases as many as four or five play leaders on the staff".  "We have now reached the stage where the adventure playground equipment is being commercially manufactured with the accent on safety".  "Designs are changing and the adventure playgrounds are in danger of becoming new look conventional playgrounds, with little to stimulate the imagination of children who frequent them". 

 

In many ways it is very unfortunate that his prophecy has become present day reality, with the building aspect of the children’s den building gone from the free play adventure playgrounds, forever.  Which in many ways is in itself a great pity and it is most unfortunate that Bernard’s prophecy has become reality. Thus the play movements greatest creative activity has been repressed by the statutory law makers.

 

 Recent developments from both sides of the political spectrum have encouraged the growth of numerous out of school, play initiatives. Governments have come to realise that a lack of such provision has prevented parents and guardians from either gaining employment or training.

 

Significant funds have been made available supporting child care facilities, along with training and information. Training and enterprise agencies have worked alongside various voluntary organisations to develop such schemes.

 

Schemes most certainly need to be established, that encompass a soundly constructed and equipped building. Such premises need to provide play space, toilets, kitchen facilities and access to external areas. Schools, community centres and youth clubs need a minimum conversion. Other suitable buildings that may be appropriate include, village halls, colleges and other such buildings, owned by either the private or public sector. Employees could also be used to facilitate such schemes.

 

Grants can be made available through such initiatives to help towards start up costs, along with possible conversions. Other costs include safety and for the actual child’s play equipment. Support is however very crucial, particularly when it comes to financial support and allowing such initiatives through their first financial year of existence, alongside a sound business plan, is imperative. Such plans should show the viability of the project at the completion of the initial year of operation.

 

National Guidelines.

 

All schemes which cater for children under the age of 8 years must be registered with the local authority (Social Services) and as such all schemes must comply with all the provisions of the Children’s Act 1989.
National guidelines have been set for developing play projects that enable new places for children on new schemes, specifically those between the age ranges of 5 to 12 years old.  Schemes would need to cater for local demand within these age bands. Such schemes must be open during term time after school until at least 6.00pm, but could open until 8.00pm and should offer at least 8 weeks of holiday care and provision from Mondays to Fridays. The aims of such initiatives should be to develop quality out of school hours child care that is both readily accessible and affordable.  Whilst promoting and developing free access to information, regarding all out of school childcare provision, including childminders and holiday schemes. Qualified staff must operate such schemes; such as teachers, youth leaders, and play leaders, who are qualified to work with certain age levels.

 

Schools and youth centres can provide in-house schemes with staff input and appropriate remuneration, they can also more specifically, rent premises or facilities for others to run such schemes. In its very first year of operation, 40 out of the 75 Tec’s in England and Wales were actually involved, as part of the national initiative and 4000 children participated in the schemes which were set up.

 

In 1996 I attended the Dorset initiative ‘Introduction to Play Work’ course, run by Work & Play.Operated by Dorset TEC at Poole and organised by Sue Strong and Jill Maguire. Here there were a wide range of topics covered including group exercises. The values of play work were recognised and the qualities of the play worker were stated, as being those of patience, reliability,versatility, communication, experience, in tune, creative, approachable, organised, enabler, sense of humour, tolerance, energy, enthusiasm and imagination, amongst many other positive qualities.

  

             

 

Play itself was recognised as being social, intellectual, fun, interactive, educational, language development, stimulation, creative, energetic, physical, messy, noisy, spontaneous, exploratory, emotional, instructive, enjoyable and constructive, amongst many other positive aspects.

 

THE BOYS WINKLE

He had a little winkle

he kept it in his pants

he took it down to longham

then he took it oer to France

 

he wouldn't let the girls see it

he wouldn't take that chance

he wasn't ready for love yet

he didn't want romance

 

he loved that little winkle

though it was rare you see

it didn't have a father

or mother

like a ship lost at sea

 

he had a little winkle

he was proud as proud could be

he took it to the fairground

he took it overseas

 

he told it lots of stories

about his resume

then he took it to the sea shore

put it back in the sea.

 

 The staffing of kids clubs should meet certain criteria. There should be a minimum of one member of staff per 8 children, with at least two members of staff on duty at any time. Regardless of the number of children present within a group.  At least half of the staff should hold relevant qualifications, such as child- care training, teaching, play work qualifications and youth work experience. Or else they should be committed to the appropriate training, such as working towards an N.V.Q.(National Vocational Qualification)

 

In addition they should have experience in working with children between the ages of 5 – 16 years, with the ability to maintain high standards of practice at all times. Staff ratios should not include students, trainees or people participating in work experience. Children aged 3 or under should not attend such projects. When a member of staff has a child aged 3 or over attending, they must be on the register.

 

The staff are responsible for the children in their care at all times. Staff must show that they are fit and suitable to care for children and they must be willing to present a personal statement to the effect. - all children in their care will be catered for with equal concern and with due care and regard
to their religious persuasion, racial origin, cultural and linguistic backgrounds.  As well as their sex and ability. Physical punishments or practices that humiliate or frighten children or threats of such punishments or practices will not be used and or tolerated.

 

There shall be no smoking in the presence of children and or within all such premises
occupied by the group. Enquiries may be made as considered necessary to the Police, GP, Health Authority, Education Department, Probation Service, N.S.P.C.C and or other bodies or agencies. Alongside all necessary police checks being made prior to that person working with children, directly or indirectly.

 

                  

The principles for the care of children and the quality of provision for good practice are paramount and include the child’s welfare and development. Children should be treated and respected as individuals whose needs should be catered for.

The child’s parent’s responsibility should be recognised and respected. They are generally the first educators of their children, this should be reflected in their relationship with other carers and providers. The values, which may derive from different social backgrounds, racial, cultural, religious and linguistic, should always be recognised and respected. The aims and objectives of the scheme should be clearly written in order to share them with parents and other interested parties.

 

Events and activities for play projects.

 

These could cover a wide range and variety of play interests and community interests. Including the following activities and organised functions:

 

Fetes, Fairs, Jumble sales, Theme’s market’s, Barbecues, Cream teas, Coffee mornings and Tupperware parties.  Highland games, It’s a knockout competition’s, Pram and baby races, Fancy dress shows, Pet shows, Sponsored Walks, Sponsored Disco and Charity walks.  Swim marathons, Bike ride or hike, Fancy dress football, Dads versus Mums pyjama football, Tiny tots disco, Community bonfire and fireworks evenings.  Talent competition, Karioke contests, Senior citizens tea, old time music, Pantomime, Carol evening, Halloween party, Baby sitting service, Firewood delivery service, Cabaret, Wine and Cheese evenings.

 Candle making, Craft evening, Art exhibition, Flower arranging, Dance competition, Break dancing competition, Carnival, Street procession, Yoga, Painting, Cookery, Pop concert, Dinner and dance, Mask making sessions, Jewellery making and Open days. So many activities could be arranged, including Treasure hunts, Car washing service, Go-kart racing, Computer games day, Garden produce show, Children through the ages show, Play day, Gymnkhana, Fast tea, Raffles, Lottery, Promise auction, Swop shop, CD Fair, Book sale, Antique fair and Dutch auction.  Sports meeting, Glamorous granny show, Baby show, Balloon race, Bring and buy sale, Strawberry teas, Car boot sale, Teddy bears picnic, Open air disco, Clay pigeon shoot and Bed push. 

Others like  Bedlam day, Donkey rides, Pony rides, Sand castle competition, Cricket match, Netball match, Fun run, Fortune telling, Horoscopes, Fun fairs, Carnivals Mini golf, Model making Heavy horse show. Tractor display and Puppet show.  Quiz, Rag week, Scavenger hunt, Tennis tournament, Toy fair, Tug of war, Spine chillier trail, Celebrity auction,Orienteering, Table tennis, Medieval day, Water frolic, parachute play and party.

 

Children want and need to play, they cannot help it, and it is in their very nature and necessary, for their full development. They should always be encouraged to play, for not only does it keep them happy, but also they learn so much through their play experiences.

 

Play materials and equipment.
 

                                           Children need a vast number, amount and variety of play materials, which must be safe to use, imaginative and colourful, yet need not be very expensive. However, there must be a structured educational programme within the free activities of particular play places such as day nurseries. By using their creative imaginations within the caring guidance of such fully trained adults, children will quickly develop language, motor and social skills. All of which are essential to their development. Whilst at the same time learning to both make and to share, relationships, along with communication skills and social skills alike.

 

 It is also very important that their play equipment should reflect their multi-cultural ethnic requirements. This is particularly more so if they happen to live in an inner city or multi racial community. The range and type of play equipment provided should be specifically geared to their age range and gender. It should include toys and equipment that specifically covers the areas which are most beneficial to their overall, individual and group play needs. Such as for example adventure play, imaginative play, creative play, and constructive play, as well as sand and water elements.

 

It is therefor necessary that a good play project should itself contain a wide range and variety of good quality play equipment, which meets the needs of all of its users. When catering specifically for young children it is imperative that the play environment meets their particular needs. Small children in particular need places to play, to make a mess, to play with both sand and water, to cut out shapes, make models, play instruments, dress up and to join with their peers in the singing of simple rhymes and jingles.

They also need to play on slides, in Wendy houses and to take part in similar pursuits, always within the watchful eyes of adults who are fully trained and with whom they can turn to in times of need, for help, advice support or comfort. All children need to have adults somewhere around if only to read them stories, to sing with them and to ensure that their play environment is safe and exciting.

 

 Play Needs. The play needs of our children remain ‘basically the same’ in our present age. When compared to those children of previous generations. Modern day children have however, in many areas, become more sophisticated and have matured that much earlier than the children of yester years. From an age of 5 to 8 years they need to explore and to experience a variety of energetic pastimes of short periods.To play by themselves and with others as part of a group environment. To identify with other children, to respond too rhythmic sounds, to make choices, rules and to share experiences and to co-operate in play and to organise their own play times. Later in middle childhood of say 9 to 11 years of age they need to engage in more strenuous activities with elements of roughness, to enjoy their roles as boys and girls. To engage in single gender as well as mixed gender activities and to participate in a wide range of activities with a wide range of play materials.

 
 

 

Children need to succeed in co-operative play that provides individualsatisfaction, to plan, lead and to check their progress, to belong to peer groups and to gain the respect and approval of others. By adolescence children need to develop skills and co-ordination, activities which do not draw attention and to their own self awkwardness, to participate in some activities in separate groups and also some together. To belong to various groups and to plan and develop their own individual activities, to choose such activities, to be leaders and to create their own games as well as to evaluate progress. They need to be in situations requiring practice of fair play, to be able to participate in activities, which can be modified to overcome the fatigue factor, as well as to learn when to stop and when enough is enough.

 

Although some of the hopes dreams and aspirations of the early pioneering play workers have to some extent been met since the early days, when organised play was in its infancy. It is a sad fact of reality that the total picture is still that of piecemeal play provision nationally. Due to a variety of factors, including lack of political persuasion, influence, adequate finance or space and suitable facilities. Although there has been certain growth areas, such as that of national safety standards and the maintenance of conventional play equipment.Along with safety surfaces. Nursery centres, play- groups, play schemes and many of the new developing out of school clubs, are thriving.

 

Whilst there are still adventure playgrounds and play centres which have survived and have adapted. In some cases such as at Birmingham, to encompass other provisions, such as city farms and play group programmes. Whilst children have also gained from the growth of theme parks and adventure play sites within holiday camps and nature trails. Even shopping centres and supermarkets are providing soft play, indoor provision for children, which is itself quite a step forwardfrom their early play sculptures provision.

 

School playgrounds.

 

 

One area however where children’s play needs are yet to be fully met, is that of within school playgrounds themselves and in the actual school building. Which is still often not used sufficiently during weekends and school holidays.  As adults many of us can no doubt recall the lonely harsh concrete or tarmacked playgrounds of our school days. Where we were often shut out on cold wintry days to find our own pastimes in rope games, rhyming slang, card flicks, marbles, jacks, yo-yos, spinning tops, hop scotch, elastics jumps, hula hoops, chase, leap frog or football. 

 

 Here there was with little in the way of supervision and no adventurous equipment to climb on or to play with. Here each day children would fall and graze their knees, braise their elbows or sprain joints, as a result of falls onto these so called playgrounds,surfaces.

 

There have been efforts in recent years to go some way to correct this inequality, with concrete pipes, painted stepping stones, or colourful snakes and ladders, alphabets designs on the tarmac surface or even with some type of wooden log miniature play area. However these are very limited examples and although some authorities are becoming more adventurous with gardens, conservation areas and play areas with safety surfaces, it is still quite rare.

 

However, in 1990, the ‘Department of Education and Science’ did some research in the matter, to encourage more innovate use of school grounds and play areas. This was in order to encourage a more stimulating environment for learning and play. Such initiatives are badly needed to go some way to improving the present Dickensian playgrounds of our schools. Which have encouraged bullying, boredom and accidents to happen to children which many of whom are unnecessary in our modern technological environment. This is an obvious area of the child’s environment where education authorities are failing, where parents, school governors and staff alike should be encouraged to provide safer playgrounds.

 

This is itself one area of life where an important aspect of the child’s educational needs, are not in fact being fully met,which is quite a paradox, when one considers that it is through their play, that they actually learn. Whilst in so many other areas of their life, such as the play parks, theme parks, holiday parks, playschemes and centres, even in open play spaces outside at the rear of pubs, child’s play is catered for. In all of these places children’s play needs are being to some extent met. Yet in the prime educational establishment, where children spend most of their childhood days, they still so often remain to some extent trapped, in a danger zone of concrete and tarmac surfaces. All within their own important play times, in between the longer periods of their important formal education.

 

Child’s play itself is obviously therefor not taken too seriously as yet, when children are themselves still separated from play experiences in safe surroundings.Left mainly to their own devices within dangerous educational establishments environments. It is no wonder that so many of our children see school as a threat and lose interest in education at an early age, when their full life play experiences and total play environments are not taken seriously by adults.

 

 

The playtimes of the school playground could well be a major extension of the school learning experience, if permitted to fulfil the children’s own expectations. I am of the opinion that the child’s school community should be a total social educational experience where the child is encouraged to play out his or her fantasies, imaginations. In a secure friendly and supervised play environment, in between the more structured lessons. This is one area, which needs to be looked at seriously, as we go forward to the new millennium and prepare our children for fresh challenges and opportunities

 

Play Training.

 

 
 

 

Another area of concern and some controvasy within the play work field has been that of the training of playleaders, although this has always been a controversial subject. In the early days of the profession it was felt that good leadership was something that evolved out of the personality; a sort of magical personality thing. Either you had it, or you did not have it.  However as the profession developed with its varied interests and range of activities it became essential that play staff possessed a knowledge of essential skills. Such as first aid, childcare, welfare rights, recreational pursuits, child psychology, social work and construction skills. Whilst not forgetting knowledge of pre school play, youth work and community work.

 

Initially courses were offered to those already in the field, ranging from day release play leadership courses at colleges of F.E, crash courses operating from N.P.F. At Play Field House, or courses run locally either by play associations or local authorities.  Such courses were usually supported through the offices of the N.P.F.A’s own play leadership department, with local college participation. Eventually such opportunities were all amalgamated into one specific full time diploma courses at Thurrock. With additional day release courses in other further education colleges of education nationally.

 

In recent years with the development of the national vocational qualifications format, new programmes were set and a qualification in play work up to level 5 has been established nationally. However there remains many in the ranks of professionals who do not regard the qualification with any value despite the work involved in their attainment.

 

These courses and their attainment are based upon the individual students practice, knowledge and understanding of the units, their competence and their values. Each student will need to prepare and present a portfolio of evidence based on his/her evidence of prior learning from the work place play venue or similar. The gathering of informative proof or evidence by the student is paramount. Along with an understanding of the units and the elements needed for the assessment and validation by the awarding body.

 Such evidence can range from an employers witness statement to daily play programmes. Evidence can include the following examples - Minutes of meetings, attendance lists, newsletters, letters, newspaper cuttings, schedules and references. As well as letters of appointment, letters from employers, conditions of service, awards, certificates, proof of work undertaken by the student, research documents, qualifications, membership of play bodies, playground reports, financial reports and statements, official documents and headed letters from play bodies.

 

The courses have placements on play projects for specific objectives, such as undertaking a project for the venue and also using material at hand as proof of work evidence for the students portfolio. The task of gathering informative evidence for the portfolio unit’s elements, is time consuming and demanding. More so as one progresses to the higher N.V.Q level of 3, 4 or 5. 

 

 The training of play workers has therefore become more of a personal development theme. With the student using his or her first hand knowledge to bring his / her training requirements up to date, through placements or work experience. 

 
 

 
 

 

  Play needs and Safety
 

The play needs of the modern child, as we move into the millennium, although sophisticated, remain essentially simple.  Space is paramount, somewhere where they can stretch their limbs and energies.

 

Safety is also a major factor, with local authorities becoming more aware at last of their responsibilities, through precedents being set.

 

 With instances nationally of parents suing councils for negligence, where safety standards have been ignored.

 Where children have been seriously injured from falls in park playgrounds. On concrete surfaces, or whilst using play equipment, which has not been adequately maintained.Or or where safety standards have been ignored.

 

Fresh air is obviously another major factor with the increasing high rates of asthma, Particularly amongst the child population, along with the other factors of congested roads and the child being driven to school, even when the school is within easy walking distance of the child’s home.

 

Rob Wheway of Fair Play For Children wrote in a front page editorial in the Guardian of August 1992 entitled "Why girls and boys stay in to play’.

 

Rob wrote that,

 "In the last twenty years children have been punished by being restricted in their numerous outings to amble in their local community. To visit relations, meet friends, fish in local streams, make dens in the few remaining pieces of woodland, or bombed sites, or play games on the rec. or in the fields".

 

  "The use of the car for any journey local or otherwise, has made a definite difference in the rate of traffic around our communities and thereby cut off our children’s access. to Even the local amenity, whether adventure playground or unsupervised swing park playground". 

 

 "Its time that we played fair with our children’s lives and looked seriously at the way we have imprisoned our children and thereby denied them their right to play in and around their neighbourhoods in safety".

 

We are now even in a worse situation from when Rob wrote his warning, with even less recreational spaces. Particularly recreation playing fields, which have been sold off for housing development, along with even many of the children’s school playing fields. More children than ever have difficulty finding safe places to cross their busy neighbourhood roads with more and more traffic and poor air quality.As a result,children are having less and less recreation. So that many of our children are therefor not healthy and fit as children were in earlier decades. Directly due to less exercise and poor air quality.

 

All these are major factors, which offset the child’s physical development and needs to be adhered to if there is any hope for the future. From the earlier decades reformers called for improvements in safety on the roads, play space for children and exercise or recreation space.Unfortunately in many ways since that time,things have to a great extent actually deteriorated.

 

Street games and Rhymes..

The adventurous hidden places for play are even rarer for children now and due to safety concerns we tend to over protect children from the dangers of strangers and busy roads. The Traditional street playground games and rhymes of earlier times are diminishing as a result. Nickelodeon which polled 1000 children and 1000 adults in 2005, came up with the following facts.
 
 Children have shunned traditional games like conkers and chase games which have virtually dissappeared in favour of mobile text, gameboy consoles and high tech. The only games left as popular was football which one in ten still played. Some of the children had never heard of games like whats the time mr wolf,Hide and Seek and double dutch skipping. The old style adventure playgrounds have adapted to safety standards with new surfaces and low-level handrails, unfortunately as a consequence much of the adventure element has gone. Play projects with a solid ratio of adult to children, has meant that many are sending kids home with too high numbers to cover. Plus there are now as a consequence, few playgrounds with such large attendance’s, as was the case in previous decades.

 

Their findings confirmed what many experts have predicted, that britain is storing up a major health problem with a third of boys and half of girls getting less than the recommended 1 hour of exercise a day.Many are driven to school,glued to the tv and their pcs and are overweight on junk foods.

 

 

 

A national survey undertaken by childrens tv channel

 

However now there are greater options at hand with safer surfaces and better training of play staff. The need for good quality play places for children within our communities remains essential, easily accessible and with quality leadership.

 

Although the conventional unsupervised play areas such as swing parks, play spaces are necessary, these should be seen as only secondary to supervised play areas, play clubs and schemes which operate when children need them.

 

 After school, at weekends and during school holiday periods.

The early founders of child’s play work, were correct in promoting such provision for all ages of children, specifically in communities where they still are more than ever so desperately needed.

 

The earliest adventure playgrounds to the modern day play facility, are all none the less similar in aspirations, with their aim always to provide safe, adventurous, creative activities for all of our children.The concept and the reality are,and still remain to this day,an extraordinary adventure,for all of those who have lived through the changes, whilst growing in both the knowledge and the understanding of the play world of children.

 

Despite the dissapearance of many of the junk adventure laygrounds in the uk in recent years.Mainly due to the health and safety laws.

 

Play time is over for many of our children,with up to half of youngsters banned from climbing trees, playing conkers or riding their bikes by over-protective parents who are terrified that they might get hurt.

 

ICM research for Play England shows that half of seven to 12-year-olds are banned from climbing trees. Four in 10 were banned from playing in their local park or recreational area without an adult present and one in three cannot ride a bike without parental supervision. One in five had been banned from playing conkers and one in six were not allowed to play chase because over-protective parents had ruled that it was too dangerous.

 

 THE DECLINE OF CHILDS PLAY. Dr. David Elkind wrote in 2007 that "play is rapidly disappearing from our homes, our schools, and our neighbourhoods". .

 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 

 

 He found from studies in the U.S.A that over the last two decades alone, children have lost eight hours of free, unstructured, and spontaneous play a week.

 

More than 30,000 schools there have eliminated recess to make more time for academics.

 

From 1997 to 2003, children's time spent outdoors fell by 50 percent, according to a study by Sandra Hofferth at the University of Maryland. Hofferth has also found that the amount of time children spend in organized sports has doubled, and the number of minutes children devote each week to passive leisure, not including watching television, has increased from 30 minutes to more than three hours. It is no surprise, then, that childhood obesity is now considered an epidemic.

 

But the problem goes well beyond obesity. Decades of research has shown that play is crucial to physical, intellectual, and social-emotional development at all ages. This is especially true of the purest form of play: the unstructured, self-motivated, imaginative, independent kind, where children initiate their own games and even invent their own rules.

 

In infancy and early childhood, play is the activity through which children learn to recognize colours and shapes, tastes and sounds—the very building blocks of reality. Play also provides pathways to love and social connection. Elementary school children use play to learn mutual respect, friendship, cooperation, and competition. For adolescents, play is a means of exploring possible identities, as well as a way to blow off steam and stay fit. With play on the decline, we risk losing these and many other benefits.

 

For too long, we have treated play as a luxury that kids, as well as adults, could do without. But the time has come for us to recognize why play is worth defending: It is essential to leading a happy and healthy life.

 

Research into the benefits of play. Years of research has confirmed the value of play. In early childhood, play helps children develop skills they can  Research into the benefits of play.

 

Years of research has confirmed the value of play. In early childhood, play helps children develop skills they can not get in any other way. Babbling, for example, is a self-initiated form of play through which infants create the sounds they need to learn the language of their parents. Likewise, children teach themselves to crawl, stand, and walk through repetitious practice play. At the preschool level, children engage in dramatic play and learn who is a leader, who is a follower, who is outgoing, who is shy. They also learn to negotiate their own conflicts.

 

 

Charter for Play.

 

 

 A 2007 report from the American Academy of Paediatrics documents that play promotes not only behavioural development but brain growth as well. The University of North Carolina's Abecedarian Early Child Intervention program found that children who received an enriched, play-oriented parenting and early childhood program had significantly higher IQ's at age five than did a comparable group of children who were not in the program. (105 vs. 85 points).

 

A large body of research evidence also supports the value and importance of particular types of play. For example, Israeli psychologist Sara Smilansky's classic studies of sociodramatic play, where two or more children participate in shared make believe, demonstrate the value of this play for academic, social, and emotional learning.

 

 Why is CHILDS PLAY disappearing.

 

  The decline of children's free, self-initiated play is the result of a perfect storm of technological innovation, rapid social change, and economic globalization.

Technological innovations have led to the all-pervasiveness of television and compu

ter screens in our society in general, and in our homes in particular. An unintended consequence of this invasion is that childhood has moved indoors. Children who might once have enjoyed a pick-up game of baseball in an empty lot now watch the game on TV, sitting on their couch.

 

 

 Meanwhile, single and working parents now outnumber the once-predominant nuclear family, in which a stay-at-home mother could provide the kind of loose oversight that facilitates free play. Instead, busy working parents outsource at least some of their former responsibilities to coaches, tutors, trainers, martial arts teachers, and other professionals. As a result, middle-income children spend more of their free time in adult-led and -organized activities than any earlier generation. (Low-income youth sometimes have the opposite problem: Their parents may not have the means to put them in high-quality programs that provide alternatives to playing in unsafe neighbourhoods.)

 

Finally, a global economy has increased parental fears about their children's prospects in an increasingly high-tech marketplace. Many middle-class parents have bought into the idea that education is a race, and that the earlier you start your child in academics, the better.

 

As adults have increasingly thwarted self-initiated play and games, we have lost important markers of the stages in a child's development. In the absence of such markers, it is difficult to determine what is appropriate and not appropriate for children. We run the risk of pushing them into certain activities before they are ready, or stunting the development of important intellectual, social, or emotional skills.

 

By pushing young children into team sports for which they are not developmentally ready, we rule out forms of play that once encouraged them to learn skills of independence and creativity. Instead of learning on their own in backyards, fields, and on sidewalks, children are only learning to do what adults tell them to do. Moreover, one study found that many children who start playing soccer at age four are burned out on that sport by the time they reach adolescence, just the age when they might truly enjoy and excel at it.

 

 

Charter for Play.

http://www.playscotland.org/pdfs/charter-for-childrens-play 

 

 Recent studies in the U.K.

 

 

 Meanwhile in the UK in 2007  researchers interviewed 1,030 children and young people, aged from seven to 16, and 1,030 adults and declared that play time is over for children, with up to half of youngsters banned from climbing trees, playing conkers or riding their bikes. By over-protective parents who are terrified that they might get hurt.

 

 Culture of Fear.

 In his book Paranoid Parenting, the sociologist Professor Frank Furedi describes the culture of fear that has led parents to restrict their children's movements outdoors. Professor Furedi complained that in 1971, eight in every 10 eight-year-olds were allowed to walk to school alone. Today it is thought to be fewer than one in 10. There has been growing concern that health and safety fears have stifled schools, encouraging them to ban traditional playground games such as conkers, snowball fights and cartwheeling, or prohibited pupils from doing the backstroke in swimming lessons.  John F Kennedy Primary in Washington, Tyne and Wear, banned the sack race and the three-legged run from sports days – in case the pupils were hurt. In 2005, the headmaster of Cummersdale Primary School, in Carlisle, bought six pairs of industrial safety-goggles for pupils to wear when they played conkers in the playground. Josie Gleave, of Play England, argued that the low probability of accidents made playgrounds one of the safest places for children to be. The risk of a fatal playground injury is approximately one in 30 million and three-quarters of injuries sustained on the playground consist of minor cuts or bruises. "

 

The research shows that children need to experience challenging play in order to develop important life skills and to better manage risk and challenge in their daily lives, she said. "However, opportunities for children to take such risks are limited. This is due to our risk-averse culture and an increase in health and safety constraints. It is clear that we need to address the current 'cotton-wool culture' and to provide children with more opportunities for adventurous play."

 

However, the survey's findings also showed that a large proportion of children were being banned from taking risks by their parents.

 
GOVERNMENT INITIATIVE BACKS ADVENTURE PLAYGROUNDS 2009.
 
 Today in 2009 the government is to try to turn around the “no ball games” attitudes of councils and parents with the building of a new network of adventure playgrounds that encourage children to take risks and get dirty.

 

Details of the plans were announced  by Ed Balls, the children’s secretary, and Andy Burnham, the culture secretary when they released a national play strategy.

 

Ministers pointed to research showing how over-protective society has become, with one in three parents refusing to allow children to play outside their house or garden. As many as a quarter of those aged 8-10 have never even played outside with an adult. They are concerned that children are being deprived by being kept inside, a trend encouraged by over-protective parents and “no ball games” signs placed on walls by councils and residents’ groups. When the idea for more adventure playgrounds was first announced in last year’s children’s plan alongside a series of other measures designed.

 

 Local authorities and their strategic partners have a responsibility to support children’s play and young people’s recreation as an aspect of their duty to co-operate under Section 10 of the Children Act 2004 and within the Every Child Matters framework. The majority of District Councils will have developed a play strategy which will set out how they will be providing and maintaining local play opportunities for children. Many of these plans will have been revised in light of recommendations from the review ‘Getting serious about play’, jointly commissioned by the DCMS and the then DfES.

 

One of the outcomes of this review was the creation of the Big Lottery Fund which made £155m available to fund play provision in England. With the announcement, in the Children’s Plan, of the new £235m investment and the first ever national play strategy for England, all local authorities are expected to develop a strategy, in conjunction with their key strategic partners. Thirty local authorities have been identified to be Play Pathfinders, these local authorities will receive around £2m capital and around £500k revenue funding to deliver a minimum of 28 new or refurbished play areas and one staffed adventure playground per local authority. The remaining authorities are Playbuilders and will receive around £1m Capital and around £45k revenue funding to deliver a minimum of 22 new or refurbished play areas per local authority. This will mean 3,500 new or refurbished play areas and 30 new staffed adventure playgrounds expected by 2011.

  However, the survey's findings also showed that a large proportion of children were being banned from taking risks by their parents.

  ADVENTURE PLAYGROUNDS

 

 

All you need to and want to know about Adventure playgrounds.

 

WHAT IS AN ADVENTURE PLAYGROUND?

  Over the years since its conception of the term Adventure Playground has been banded about by individuals and organisations so much so that now they can mean a vast variety of different things to different people. The term now includes a variety of examples ranging from unsupervised architectural designed play areas, commercially designed theme parks, play areas designed specifically for the disabled child, park play areas, neighberhood centres to pet areas, farmland projects or activity centres. Whilst the true Adventure Playground is in fact none of these. They are areas of land set aside in a neighbourhood where local children have free access to play structures, play facilities indoors and out which are supervised by trained play staff. Within these sites the children are encouraged to take risks through play pursuits, aerial runways, slides, walkways, commando nets, etc.They are able to be actively involved in construction work and use of tools and materials under guidance and supervision. Theses schemes are neighbourhood orientated with local parent’s management committees and fund raising initiatives. A variety of activities can be planned including outings; social activities play activities and community events. Each site can include possibilities such as gardening, pet’s areas, nursery areas and youth sections as well as barbecue areas etc. There is no limit to the range and variety of activities and functions on an adventure playground. Its development and its content depend to a great extent on the imagination of its users and the empethy of its leaders and staff. A true Adventure Playground is a Community of children and parents involved in sharing and enjoying the fruits of play.

  The following extract is from the London Play website which povides support to childrens play projects throughout the city of London. 

 

Adventure and taking risks is an important part of growing up: it is the way that children learn about themselves and the world around them. Adventure playgrounds provide children with the opportunity to take adventurous risks, safe in the knowledge that professional help is there if needed.There are more than hundreds of adventure playgrounds in the UK providing school-aged children with opportunities to play that are difficult to find elsewhere in our busy, urban environment. Fenced and secure, adventure playgrounds are oases of nature in the middle of neighbourhoods.Typically, adventure playgrounds are open access: there's no charge to come in (though some have had to introduce charges to make ends meet), and children are free to come and go as they please - after school, at weekends and during school holidays.Most adventure playgrounds have quiet places for children to read or do homework, many have computers, some have after-school clubs which provide formal child-care for working parents. Some run youth clubs for teenagers, others provide a meeting place for parent and toddler groups. All adventure playgrounds have their own buildings as well as outdoor spaces and play structures; and each has its own unique character.  

 
 
 
 

THE ROOTS OF THE ADVENTURE PLAYGROUND IDEA.

 

  

Carl Theodor Sørenson (1893-1979)

 

 

Sorenson was a Danish Archtect and planner who had observed closely the city children playing on building sites and although he was not an opponent of playground equipment,he wanted it limited to see-saws, swings and sand-boxes. He had long observed that the children in his area were attracted to playing on construction sites and not on the conventional playgrounds. They appeared excited by the endless possibilities that the construction site offered them in creating their own adventures. Thus Sorenson developed the germ of an imaginative idea,the junk playground.

 

Thus in a journal article as early as 1935 Sørensen the founder of the concept of Adventure Playgrounds wrote:

 

"Finally we should probably at some point experiment with what one could call a junk playground. I am thinking in terms of an area, not too small in size, well closed off from its surroundings by thick greenery, where we should gather, for the amusement of bigger children, all sorts of old scrap that the children from the apartment blocks could be allowed to work with, as the children in the countryside and in the suburbs already have. There could be branches and waste from tree polling and bushes, old cardboard boxes, planks and boards, "dead" cars, old tyres and lots of other things, which would be a joy for healthy boys to use for something. Of course it would look terrible, and of course some kind of order would have to be maintained; but I believe that things would not need to go radically wrong with that sort of situation. If there were really a lot of space, one is tempted to imagine tiny little kindergartens, keeping hens and the like, but it would at all events require an interested adult supervisor..."

 

Earlier  In 1931 he had published Park Politics in Town and Country, a book that would be highly influential for European urban landscape planning but has now been largely forgotten. In it he coined the phrase ‘Junk Playground’ from his observations of children playing on empty building sites. He decided to integrate this idea into the designs for the open spaces he and his colleagues were designing for the new Danish housing associations and parks.

 

There are many factors that led to the birth of adventure play, but none so important as the psychological theories of childhood which emerged in the 1930's. These new ideas about childhood and play entered the mainstream culture and began to affect politics, town planning and child care practices. Within this climate of innovation  Sørensen and Hans Dragehjelm (a school teacher) created their Family and Children's Park proposal. For several years both men had been interested in designing and building appropriate play spaces for the children of Copenhagen.

 

Sørensen and Dragehjelm thought that natural play was the ideal play and worked best in natural and rural surroundings.

 

It was Sorenson who was to found the first recorded Junk Playground in the deprived neighberhood of Emdrupt,Copenhagen

 

 . It was opened in August 1943 as part of a housing project with 719 large-family households and was an immediate success. At Emdrup nothing was static or expensive. It was filled with junk - wood, rope, canvas, tires, wire, bricks, pipes, rocks, nets, logs, balls, abandoned furniture, wheels, vehicles, and an unimaginable assortment of other things.The first playleader of the Emdrup adventure playground John Bertelsen wrote in an article in 1946 stating:

 

"The adventure playground is an attempt to give the city child a substitute for the play and development potential it has lost as the city has become a place where there is no space for the child's imagination and play. Access to all building sites is forbidden to unauthorized persons, there are no trees where the children can climb and play Tarzan. The railway station grounds and the common, where they used to be able to fight great battles and have strange adventures, do not exist any more. No! It is now not easy to be a child in the city when you feel the urge to be a caveman or a bushman".

                          http://www.cityprojects.org/cityprojects_content.php?id=167&i=11

Lady Marjorie Allen after her first visit to Emdrupt stated that

 

; " It was like a revelation, I knew in the first instance of seeing it, they had hit on something tremendously important".  "They are decidedly messy occupations and they make the planners who are mostly tidied minded unhappy".  "Nevertheless, they must never forget children enjoy being dirty and untidy, adults abhor it, we have to decide whether we are to make playgrounds for children, or playgrounds that please the planners".

"It is a rewarding experience for children to take and to overcome risks, to learn to use lethal tools with safety".

 

 

  Shortly after, on her return to the UK, Lady Marjorie Allen formed the Under 14 Council; which was to be known in later years as The Save The Children Fund.

 

By 1946, local councils were campaigning strongly for play, in particular for adventure playgrounds in the UK. By 1951 the N.P.F.A had itself formed a committee lead by Lord Luke, to look into the matter, following Lady Allen;s public platform via a Times article on juvenile crime.

 

Lady Allen responded to the article, she wrote ;"that municipal playgrounds were often as bleak as barrack squares and just as boring". "You are not allowed to build fires". "You will head for a juvenile court if you started to dig the expensive asphalt to make a cave".  "There are no bricks or planks to build a house, no workshop for carpentry, mechanical work, painting or modelling and of course no trees to climb".

 

M. Paul Friedberg Landscape design innovator , confirms, “Our problem is that",  "We want the child to be living in a padded box". "But a child has to have the real world, fraught with challenges to overcome.” 

 

Meanwhile in the U.K Drummond Abernethy was appointed as Secretary of the Playground Committee of the N.P.F.A at playfield house in 1948.

 

. Drummond's energy and vision led to the establishment of other projects and played a significant role in refining Sørenson's ideas into adventure play. The name change from junk to adventure play was designed to create a more positive public image but it also marked Drummond's extension of the original philosophy. Drummond and Lady Marjorie Allen together are widely viewed as the two most prominent figures in the development of adventure play in Britain.

 These early adventure playgrounds tended to be run with extremely limited resources and to be short lived due to lack of funds, loss of site or lack of local support. Lessons were learnt and the London Adventure Playground Association (LAPA) was established.

 

Eventually a number of playgrounds were set up on permanent sites with adequate funding. This funding was increasingly provided by the local authorities, who had come to recognize the value of such facilities. By 1973 when i was managing Pin Green adventure playground in Stevenage Herts, sixty one such playgrounds had been established across the country.

 

 

 In the years following it was the N.P.F.A through its national officers and work over the years led by Drummond, Lord Luke, Lady Marjorie Allen, Mary Nicholson, and the N.P.F.A's numerous retired officers from the armed services. That the concept of such play initiatives as adventure playgrounds were developed and grew nationally.  This radical step forward, led to the development of numerous national play projects and campaigns in the U.K. Thereby ensuring that child’s play was taken seriously by government bodies and local authorities in the years ahead. Following an article in the Times newspaper on the subject of juvenile crime in 1951, the N.P.F.A offered grant aid for the first two experimental adventure playgrounds. Lord Luke was appointed by the N.P.F.A as the Chair of such a play committee in 1951. Then by 1954 the N.P.F.A had their own published guidelines on the development of adventure playgrounds, courtesy of Mary Nicholson.

Adventure Playground in the UK also emerged alongside movements in the 1960s Europe, that worked to reclaim derelict urban spaces, many caused by the devastation of World War II. These were filled with trash and debris, the sites were considered unfit even for parking cars and were therefore abandoned by developers. However, children had no qualms about these forbidden sites, often playing happily in rubble heaps. They seemed to prefer the informality of dirt and scraps to formal jungle gyms. Eventually parents and park designers realized that these non-traditional materials inspired creative, thoughtful play. The adults and children worked together to construct the kinds of play spaces the children wanted.

 

The playgrounds they built were not just play spaces; they were fodder for studies by child psychologists. Proponents for Adventure Playgrounds claimed that the play environment they provided would help kids retain resilient and positive world-views. Adventure Playgrounds continually proved the value of learning experiences outside of school. Children could use the playground for exploring many real-life activities. (and even the imagined ones). Many of the constructions were clubhouse-type buildings that fostered elaborate games of pretend. Other equipment was designed for children to create multi-media art projects. 

 

From the early 1970s the N.P.F.A Playleadership Department gradually changed its administrative structure and image. Former Adventure Playground leaders were employed as regional officers.With a mandate to set up regional play associations throughout the UK. With people such as Mick Fitzmaurice,Tony Chilton, Andy Scott, Gyles Brandraith, Bob Hughes, Nick Bamforth, Pat Kirkwood, Rob Wheway etc. Spearheading new initiatives and encouraging the formation of new adventure playgrounds in new towns, rural communities as well as inner city areas.With the success of the Stevenage adventure playgrounds thanks to the work of Donne Buck and others like David Kershaw and Betty Pickersgill.

 

Stevenage was shown as an example how local authority and voluntary community play associations could work togrether in encouraging the growth of adventure playgrounds nationally throughout the seventies.  

 

ADVENTURE PLAYGROUNDS FOR THE DISABLED.

 

Despite these remarkable developments adventure playgrounds were still failing to meet the needs of one important group of children - those with disabilities. To fill this gap, a number of holiday schemes were set up in conjunction with the Cheyne Centre in Chelsea. The success of this venture fuelled enthusiasm for an adventure playground where children with disabilities could learn through free play. In February 1970 the Handicapped Adventure Playground Association (H.A.P.A) opened its first playground in Chelsea. My friend and collegue Dorothy Whittaker was its first leader.This was the worlds first adventure playground for disabled children.

 

H.A.P.A opened a further 5 adventure playgrounds across North, West and South London. In the 1990’s, H.A.P.A had changed its name to Kids Active and more recently merged with another charity KIDS. Whilst working with local playgroups, Mrs Diana Casswell first had the idea that certain children she was working with would benefit from adventure play. From this idea Diana Casswell, along with her husband Reverend Peter Casswell, set about starting the first adventure playground for children with disabilities outside of inner London. From the beginning, a group of committed and experienced people joined the management committee to see the creation of E.L.H.A.P.

 

 The first major hurdle was to find a suitable site for an adventure playground and by September 1976 negotiations had been completed with the charity Barnardo's for use of this site. Work to adapt it began immediately. A workable area had to be fenced off, structures and play facilities built and pathways laid. Indoor adaptations also had to be made including additional toilet accommodation together with provision for wet weather activities.

 

In the summer of 1977 E.L.H.A.P opened, being well used from the start and as facilities and awareness grew the playground became increasingly popular. Within a short time of opening demand was such that a timetable of use had to be created to allow all the users to regularly visit. Without the dedication and determination of the Casswells and the other founding members, E.L.H.A.P could never have existed.  

 

DRUMMOND ABERNETHY AND E.L.H.A.P.

 

 

 

From its first days E.L.H.A.P was fortunate in having the support of Drummond Abernethy. Drummond lived locally in Loughton and always had a particularly keen interest in E.L.H.A.P. Upon his retirement from the National Playing Fields Association in 1978 Drummond became chairman of E.L.H.A.P. This was a position he retained until ill health forced him to stand down in 1986, although he remained on the executive committee until his death. A large part of ELHAP's success is attributed to Drummond Abernethy... Under his guidance ELHAP developed into a thriving playground and its unique experiences have now been enjoyed by many thousands of children with disabilities.

 

Since 1977 ELHAP has offered adventure play opportunities to children and young people with disabilities from the local area. It remains one of only seven specialist playgrounds in the South East of England, but is regarded by its supporters as the most unique and magical of all the adventure playgrounds. Drummond Abernethy, with his wealth of adventure play experience, used to describe ELHAP as the "the very best adventure playground for children with disabilities."

GOVERNMENT INITIATIVE BACKS ADVENTURE PLAYGROUNDS 2009.

 

                 

                                         

 

Today in 2009 the government is to try to turn around the “no ball games” attitudes of councils and parents with the building of a new network of adventure playgrounds that encourage children to take risks and get dirty. Details of the plans were announced  by Ed Balls, the children’s secretary, and Andy Burnham, the culture secretary when they released a national play strategy. signs placed on walls by councils and residents’ groups. When the idea for more adventure playgrounds was first announced in last year’s children’s plan alongside a series of other measures designed

 

 

Ministers pointed to research showing how over-protective society has become, with one in three parents refusing to allow children to play outside their house or garden. As many as a quarter of those aged 8-10 have never even played outside with an adult. They are concerned that children are being deprived by being kept inside, a trend encouraged by over-protective parents and

“no ball games”

Today there around around a thousand adventure playgrounds in Europe, largely in Denmark, Switzerland, France, Germany, The Netherlands, and in England. In Germany alone there are some 400 adventure playgrounds. Japan has a significant number of adventure playgrounds as well.

 

 

 THAMES VALLEY ADVENTURE PLAYGROUND

http://www.tvap.co.uk/

 

 

http://www.playengland.org.uk/resources/pathfinder-adventure-playground-briefing.pdf

 

 

London play adventure playground newspaper

 

http://www.a-n.co.uk/publications/article/341480

 

 

http://www.londonplay.org.uk/redirect.php?title=adventureplaygroundnewspaperreprint&url=file/1140.pdf

 

 

 Childs play study 1977.
 
LONDON Adventure playgrounds

 

Downloads.

 

                         

Apples and Pears 28 Pearson Street, London E2 8EL Tel. 020 7729 6062, email Website Age range: 6 -15. Voluntary sector.
 
 Ark in the Park Hermit Road Recreation Ground, Bethell Avenue, London E16 4JT Tel. 020 7511 4253 Age range: 5 -14, fully includes disabled children, youth club. Local authority.
 
 Barnard Park Copenhagen Street, London N1 0WF Tel. 020 7837 1512, email Age range: 6 -16. Local authority.
 
Bartlett Park Bartlett Park, Upper North Street, London E14 6JP Tel. 020 7987 4891 Age range: toddlers and schoolchildren. Local authority.
 
Battersea Park Prince Wales Drive, Albert Bridge Road, London SW11 4PY Tel. 020 8871 7539 Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.
 
 Bethwin Road Bethwin Road, London SE5 Tel. 020 7703 4281, email Age range: 5 -15. Voluntary sector.
 
 Burgess Park 285 Albany Road, London SE5 0AN Tel. 020 7277 1371, email Age range: 5 -15. Local authority.
 
Cape Play and Youth Project Crouch End Hill, London N8 9EG Tel. 020 7272 4243, email Age range: 5 -19. Local authority.
 
Charlie Chaplin Bolton Crescent, Kennington, London SE5 0SE Tel. 020 7735 1819, email Age range: 5 -19. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2002 and 2009 London Adventure Playground of the Year Awards.
 
Chelsea Royal Hospital Grounds, Royal Hospital Road, London SW3 4SR Tel. 020 7730 4093, email Website Age range: 5 -15, run by KIDS, particularly for disabled children and their families. Voluntary sector.
 
Coldharbour The Course, New Eltham London SE9 3JB Tel. 020 8851 3153 Age range: 6 -15. Local authority.
 
Cornwallis Cornwallis Road, London N19 4LP Tel. 020 7281 0094 Age range: 6 -13. Local authority.
 
Crumbles Castle Bingfield Street, London N1 0BJ Tel. 020 7278 8640, email Age range: 5 -14. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2001 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
 Deptford New King Street, Deptford, London SE8 3JE Tel. 020 8691 1310, email Age range: 5 -19. Local authority.
 
Dog Kennel Hill Dog Kennel Hill, London SE22 7AA Tel. 020 7274 6197 Age range: 5 -15. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2000 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
ELHAP 119 Roding Lane North, Woodford Bridge, London IG8 8NA Tel. 020 8550 2636, email Website Age range: 5 -18, particularly for disabled children. Voluntary sector.
 
Ellen Brown 145 Grange Road, London SE1 3UE Tel. 020 7231 1356, email Age range: 8 -15, previously Spa Road Adventure Playground Local authority.
 
Evergreen Beehive Close, London E8 3JT Tel. 020 7275 9004, email Age range: 5 -15, inclusion of disabled children, nature gardens. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2005 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
 Fredericks Westcott Road, London SE17 3SY Tel. 020 7587 3840, email Age range: 5 -15. Local authority. Winner of the 2006 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
 
 Glamis Glamis Road, Shadwell, London E1W 3EE Tel. 020 7702 8301 Website Age range: ages 8 and up, under 8s can attend with an adult. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2007 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
Glyndon Elmley Street, Plumstead, London SE18 7NJ Tel. 020 8317 0655 Age range: 5 -14, under 5's mon-fri, no outside structures, football pitch, swings. Local authority.
 
Grove Gordon Grove, London SE5 9DT Tel. 020 7737 0956, email Age range: 6 -16, formerly Angel Town (Brixton Arts Group). Voluntary sector.
 
Hackney Marsh Daubeny Fields, London E9 5PP Tel. 020 8986 7245 Age range: 5 -15. Local authority.
 
Hampstead Heath (Parliament Hill) Highgate Road, Parliament Hill Fields, London NW5 1QR Tel. 020 7482 2116 Age range: 5 -12, children aged 5 -7 must be accompanied by a parent, 8 and over can attend alone. Local authority.
 
Hayward Market Road, London N7 9PL Tel. 020 7607 0033 Age range: 5 -15, run by KIDS, particularly for disabled children and their families, youth club wed nights. Voluntary sector.
 
Home Park Winchfield Road, Sydenham, London SE26 5TQ Tel. 020 8659 2329, email Age range: 5 -16. Local authority. Homerton Grove Wardle Street, London E9 6DX Tel. 020 8985 9202, email Age range: 5 -16. Voluntary sector.
 
Honor Oak Turnham Road, Brockley, London SE4 2JD Tel. 020 7639 3838, email Age range: 5 -16. Local authority. Hornimans Southern Row, London W10 5AN Tel. 020 8969 5740, email Website Age range: 5 -16, must be aged 5 by 1 Sept. Voluntary sector.
 
 KAPH (Kids Adventure Play Hackney) Spring Lane, Big Hill, London E5 9HQ Tel. 020 8806 6149, email Age range: 5 -19, run by KIDS, primarily for disabled children and their families. Voluntary sector.
 
 Kennington Park Bolton Crescent, London SE5 0SE Tel. 020 7735 7186, email Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.
 
Kimber Kimber Road, London SW18 Tel. 020 8870 2168 Age range: 5 -16. Local authority. King Henry's Walk 11 King Henry's Walk, London N1 4NX Tel. 020 7254 4783, email Age range: 6 -13, youth club Thur and Fri evenings 7pm - 9:45pm ages 13 - 19. Local authority.
 
Lady Allen Chivalry Road, London SW11 1HT Tel. 020 7228 0278, email Age range: 5 -14, run by KIDS, primarily for disabled children and their families, open access times: term time tues - fri 3-5pm, sat 10am-12pm and school holidays mon-fri 10am-12pm, not open sundays. Voluntary sector.
 
 Leyton Square Peckham Park Road, London SE15 6TL Tel. 020 7277 7591 Age range: 5 -15. Local authority.
 
 Little Wormwood Scrubs Little Wormwood Park, Dalgano Gardens, London W10 6AD Age range: 6 -14. Local authority.
 
Log Cabin 259 Northfield Avenue, London W5 4UA Tel. 020 8840 3400, email Age range: 4 -15. Particularly for disabled children and their families but fully inclusive. Voluntary sector.
 
 Lollard Street Lollard Street, Kennington, London SE11 6PX Tel. 020 7582 0208 Website Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.
 
Loughborough Park Moorland Road, London SW9 8UA Tel. 020 7926 1049, email Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.
 
Lumpy Hill 15 Market Road, London N7 9PL Tel. 020 7607 3586 Age range: 5 -14. Voluntary sector.
 
Marble Hill Marble Hill Park, Richmond Road, Twickenham, London TW1 2NL Tel. 020 8891 4930, email Age range: 5 -15. Voluntary sector.
 
 Markfield Markfield Road, London N15 4RB Tel. 020 8880 1495, email Age range: 5 -17, specialist project for disabled children. Voluntary sector.
 
 Martin Luther King Sheringham Road, London N7 8PF Tel. 020 7607 0845, email Age range: 5 -14. Voluntary sector.
 
Max Roach Wiltshire Road, London SW9 7NE Tel. 020 7274 6693 Age range: 5 -15. Local authority.
 
 Meridian Thames Street, London SE10 9DQ Tel. 020 8853 1843 Age range: 5 -16, term time 3:30-8:30, sats and school holidays 11:30-7pm, closed Sundays. Local authority.
 
Michael Williams Palace Fulham Palace, Bishop's Avenue, London SW6 6EA Tel. 020 8222 8585, email Age range: 5 -16, closed access for disabled children. Voluntary sector.
 
Mint Street Southark Bridge Road, London SE1 Tel. 020 7403 3747 Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.
 
Notting Hill Venture Community Centre, 103 Wornington Road, London W10 5YB Tel. 020 8960 3234, email Age range: 5 -15. Voluntary sector.
 
Oasis Children's Venture Priory Grove, London SW8 2PD 020 7720 4276, email Age range: 6 -16, BMX dirt track; previously Larkhall Adventure Playground. Voluntary sector.
 
 Peckham Rye Homestall Road, London SE22 0SB Tel. 020 7635 0430, email Age range: 8 -15. Local authority.
 
Play Space 1 Coral Street, London SE1 7BE Tel. 020 7803 0988, email Age range: 5 -16, children under 5 most be accompanied by an adult. Voluntary sector.
 
Plumstead Blendon Terrace, London SE18 7RR Tel. 020 8317 9432 Age range: 6 -15. Local authority.
 
Rockingham Estate Dickens Square, London SE1 4JL Tel. 020 7403 8337 Age range: 5 -16. Voluntary sector.
 
 Sands End Marinefield Road, London SW6 2LN Tel. 020 7736 6572 Age range: 5 -16. Voluntary sector.
 
Shakespeare Walk Shakespeare Walk, London N16 8TB Tel. 020 7249 8405, email Age range: 5 -15. Voluntary sector.
 
Shoreditch Mintern Street, London N1 5ES Tel. 020 7729 3770 Age range: 5-15 Local authority Slade Gardens Lorn Road, London SW9 0AB Tel. 020 7737 3829, email Website Age range: 5 -16. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2003 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
Somerford Grove Northumberland Park, Park Lane Close, London N17 0HL Tel. 020 8808 0533, email Website Age range: 5 -15. Voluntary sector. Winner of the 2008 London Adventure Playground of the Year Award.
 
Somerville Queens Road, New Cross London SE14 Tel. 020 7732 1403, email Website Age range: 5 -16. Voluntary sector.
 
St John's Wood St John' s Wood Terrace, London NW8 0LP Tel. 020 7586 1884, email Age range: 5 -12. Voluntary sector.
 
 Stewarts Road Stewarts Road, London SW8 4UG Tel. 020 7498 3330, email Age range: 8 -21, open 3:30-8pm mon-fri, 12-6 sat and sun. Voluntary sector.
 
Streatham Vale Streatham Vale Park, Abercairn Road, London SW16 Tel. 020 8764 3688 Age range: 5 -16, one o'clock club for babies and children up to 5 years. Local authority.
 
Surrey Docks Trident Street, London SE16 2LN Tel. 020 7232 0846, email Age range: 8 -15. Local authority.
 
The Dumps Oakview Road, Bellingham, London SE4 3QF Tel. 020 8698 2991 Age range: 5 -19, has chickens, guinea pigs and rabbits. Local authority.
 
Three Corners Northampton Road, London EC1R 0HB Tel. 020 7833 0795 Age range: 6 -14. Local authority. Timbuktu Grenville Road, London N19 4EJ Tel. 020 7272 2183, email Age range: 5 -14. Voluntary sector.
 
Toffee Park 30 Ironmonger Row, London EC1V 3QN Tel. 020 7251 0190, email Age range: 6 -13. Voluntary sector.
 
 
Triangle Ashmole Street, SW8 1NE Email Voluntary sector.
 
Tulse Hill Tulse Hill Estate South, London SW2 2EY Tel. 020 8674 3975 Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.
 
Waterside Play and Youth Project London N1 Playground currently being rebuilt, will reopen autumn 2009. Running daytrips and outings during summer holidays but availability is limited.
 
Weavers Viaduct Street, London E2 Tel. 020 7729 1295, email Age range: 8 -16, under 8s must be accompanied by an adult. Voluntary sector.
 
White Horse White Horse Road, London E1 0NL Tel. 020 7790 5984 Age range: 0 -14, under 8s must be accompanied by an adult. Local authority. Willington Road 55 Willington Road, London SW9 9NB Tel. 020 7737 7929, email Age range: 5 -16, nature garden, sports pitch. Local authority.
 
Woolwich Pett Street, Woolwich, London SE18 Tel. 020 8855 7321, email Age range: 6 -16. Local authority.
 
York Gardens Lavender Road, London SW11 2UG Tel. 020 7223 3269 Age range: 5 -16. Local authority.

 

 

 

 

  THE PLAY ENABLER.

                                                                              

 

A GOOD PLAY.

                                                                         

We built a ship upon the stairs

All made of the back room chairs

And filled it full of soft pillows

 

We took a saw and several nails

And water in the nursery pails

And Tom said Let us alsso take an apple and a slice of cake

Which was enough for You and Me

To go a sailing on till tea

 

We sailed for days and days

And had the very best of plays

But Tom fell out and hurt his knee

So there was no one left but me..

 

 
Robert Louis Stevenson1885.

 

A good play leader is the best asset of any play project for he or she is the pivotal link, which ensures that the project ticks. Some of the very best play leaders have had no formal qualifications in social work apart from a natural flair and that special aptitude of being able to relate well to children of all ages and to build constructive relationships.  Then nothing of any true worth can really develop in the free play environment.  It is a well-known fact that many people do not find working in play projects such as Adventure playgrounds very comfortable, with their unstructured informal free environments.

 

The play work profession has been littered with stories of those who were unable to stay the course for any length of time the job demands flexibility. A willingness to work unsociable hours as well as to be adaptable within a team setting.  Unless the leader is at ease with this style and discipline, within the chaos, the element of excitement and freedom of adventure which needs to be there, can so easily give way to a more static, formal and structured environment. Such an approach is the opposite to the philosophy of the play movement.

 

The most successful people have been those who have possessed a healthy enthusiasm for the play vocation, an endless pleasure in work with children and a positive attitude along with a confidence in themselves and the philosophy of play work with leadership. Skills in construction, building work, carpentry, cooking, crafts, sports activities, games and first aid are all valuable assets. Specialist knowledge in such key areas as counselling, welfare or social work along with health and education including solvent abuse and drugs were useful. Though the ability to scrounge a vast assortment and variety of play materials and to organise events and activities both on and off the project in the wider community are essential attributes. The play leader has to have a good relationship with the parents of the children attending the project and there are countless opportunities to develop this important aspect of the job.

 

 

One of the early pioneers of play leadership, H.S. (Pat) Turner, commented that,

"It is a personal job, demanding a personal style, more rewarding than anything else I’ve ever done". Remarking on the adventure playground concept, Pat said, " It is a living thing, a community with many facets and in constant change".

 

The play leader has to be resourceful to have a quick eye for opportunities to both improve and expand the range of facilities on the site. To be always prepared to provide an abundant range of play materials for energetic and versatile children from timber to scrap materials to game items.

 

He or she must be prepared to intervene as a mediator in situations with and amongst groups and with individual children where there is friction, bullying or conflicts of interests. To step in where there is a likelihood of harm to children causing or receiving physical hurt. Breaking up fights and disputes is unfortunately part of the job. As well as encouraging fresh and new activities, he has to provide opportunities for new occupations and the have ability to change a situation quickly. A great deal of his time is spent working closely in liaison with other professionals from the play field or the statutory welfare services. Caring professionals from the Social Services, Welfare, Probation, Education, Community Workers, Schools and Youth Workers. This involves the play leader in attending numerous meetings with play people and a wide range of those who work closely with children.

 

The N.P.F.A recognised that the play leader’s main value and functions (man or woman) were not to organise or push, but to listen, guide and help. In short, to enable' and to see that the children do not hurt themselves or one another'. The relationship between the leader and each individual child is of great importance, he must know when to help the child, and when to withdraw, so that the child can work at the problem alone and learn confidence through unaided achievement.

 

 

The play leader will try unobtrusively to get children involved in as many ways as possible.Drummond Abernethy of the N.P.F.A. once remarked to me at one of our regular meetings that

 "The play leader is to be seen like the captain of a ship". " He must be in charge of the playground and not be subservient to his management committee". "For his adventure playground to be successful, he should know through his contact with the kids how best the playground should operate and then advise his management committee accordingly".

   

CHILDHOOD PLAYS.

 

  

I was most fortune to share in their childhood days

the hours that they spent in their dreams and foolish play

I spent my life within their world

their playtime's and their games

I was obliged to share their pretences rearranged

 

I saw them grow in stature and maturity

I laughed and organized their games from land to sea

I saw their frolics and their friendships start to grow

within the cities throughout the winter snow

 

I was their friend and their counsellor of fame

I built their structures tall werin they played their games

on swings of rope and tyre with airal runways

adventure playgrounds where all the children played

 

throughout the land from john o grouts to lands end

these community's grew and flourished

wherein children could pretend

 

from toddler crawling to adolescence strength and rebellion spirits true

from Scottish cities down to dorsets Poole

children playing games of group activities

running games of dare to swinging from a tree

 

these were their childhood days

which I was privileged to share

just a play leader who took them through life's fair.

 

Ray Wills

 

It has always been seen as of great importance in the development of any adventure playground that the first play leader appointed is able to have a period of time before work on the adventure playground site, to gain contact with local children and community leaders.  In this way play leaders, have involved the children in the actual playground’s development from the start and the kids feel that the playground is truly theirs. Many play leaders have used this period of time to meet groups of kids in a variety of settings, such as school classrooms, youth clubs and on the streets. Or in less formal settings such as the local swing parks, in fact wherever children congregated in their free time.

 

In such settings, the play leader was able to best relate to them and explain the plans of the new project. The kid's involvement in these early stages was paramount, with many relationships formed between the leader and groups of children, the future users of the play scheme. In this way by the time of the playgrounds official opening of the playground, the play leader had a nucleus of young people who were keen to be involved, making the task of acceptance that much easier.

 

Two regional N.P.F.A officers and former play leaders, who had their own views on the value of this arrangement, were Mick Fitzmaurice and Alan Jenkins. They remarked in their N.P.F.A. publication that, "it is our strong feeling that the first step in developing a permanent adventure playground, or play scheme should be the employment of a play leader". However experienced or talented he or she may be they will need to grow with the community and they with him or her. Apart from the most obvious aspects of the adventure playground leaders skills and responsibilities such as building sound relationships with and amongst the kids, providing a multitude of play opportunities and resources.

 

Other attributes were vital. These included their abilities to create play structures for the children to play on, as well as climbing for sliding down or running on, or other pursuits, such as skate boarding and bike riding. These facilities ranged from large and high walk- way towers, aerial runways, swings, slides, commando nets, and climbing frame structures.

 

Construction undertaken by the playground staff and volunteers was an important day-to-day exercise, largely dependent upon their own individual and group construction skills. Good leverage, rigid support, along with strength flexibility and weight of timber, were all matters to be considered in the actual building of the play structures. The variety of wood and timber was crucial, only good solid timber was used and such timber was checked for protruding nails, damaged areas and worn sections, which all had to be either replaced or strengthened regularly. 

 

Areas had to be adequately prepared for such work with sound foundations. Depth of supports was vital and treated with preserver, the use of concrete or cement was avoided as this split wooden base and caused structural damage and danger. The size of nails and bolts, as well as their quality was checked and the range and quality of tools used for the best construction work was always the best. These included hand saws, bow saws, tenon saws, planes, bolt cutters, claw hammers, crow bars, chains, tackle ropes and commando nets.

 

Places set aside for storage of timber deliveries were essential, as was good access for swift deliveries, away from the actual children’s play areas and near, of close proximity to entrances and exits. The construction of the play structures was never totally completed, with additional work on extensions and then finally with creative artwork, using paint to ensure that the play structures were all attractive, with a variety of colours and designs. The construction of the play structures could involve work parties from local colleges or universities and students from voluntary bodies, such as ‘The United Nations Association’ or ‘International Voluntary Services.’

 

The play building itself was vitally important for indoor activities such as art and crafts, recreational, snooker, darts, cards or music with regular disco events and with a kitchen and the sales of refreshments, an essential aspect of the adventure playgrounds life. With community involvement and the organisation of events and activities, both on site and in the wider community, trips out and special play events.

 

An office with a telephone, filing system, along with first aid facilities, was essential. The adventure playground with regular attendance, following its official opening had to provide a full range of essential services, including toilets, washing and cooking facilities, electricity and water, along with sewerage services. Which all had to be brought into the playground site and into the building itself. Access to emergency services, such as fire and ambulance services, had to be catered for, with wide gate entrances and exits. Along with secure ground foundations for heavy vehicles, with sufficient room for turning of such large vehicles.

 

The facilities both in the play building and outside in the playground itself, had to be accessible to all of its many users, whilst any additional facilities when required, had to be provided for. Such range of services could well include facilities for the disabled child, pre-school play areas, youth section, a garden, a pets area, music facilities, holiday play scheme, sports and others, required for the specific needs of groups or individual children.

 

For adventure playgrounds to be truly successful, they have to provide for the total individual and groups, the play needs of all local children and in this way to become the child’s community.

 

The construction of the adventure playgrounds with their large wooden climbing structures, walkway towers, forts, rope swings and aerial runways, involved the leaders and play staff in a great deal of heavy manual work. Trenches had to be dug out with holes large enough to support the telegraph poles and railway sleepers obtained from railway sidings. There were wooden support beams, shuttering boards, wooden duckboard palettes, forestry logs and strips of four by two. Along with an endless number and variety of wood shapes, car tyres, lorry tyres, ropes nets and tackle, which stretched high into the sky. Ladders were constructed, along with wooden based slides for the younger children. Here there were wooden platforms, with rope swings to swing from, rope commando nets to climb, as well as rope Tarzan swing tyres amongst an assortment of towers that led to forts.  Along with a maze of climbing apparatus all towering high above ground level.

 

The manual work involved was at times tiring, with the regular use of heavy good strong tools. These tools included hammers, saws, crowbars, spades and shovels, along with a vast variety and quantity of strong nails, bolts, rope and tackle; these were all most essential.  All of the timber had to be checked regularly for strength as well as safety, along with any fraying lengths of rope. Checks also had to be made regularly to ensure that the play structures were always safe and strong and were always safe to use for the purpose intended. Play leaders were always aware of the need for regular inspections of the adventure playground, to ensure that there were few real hazards. Hazards such as when a child would walk onto a protruding nail, or fall against a broken or damaged piece of splintered timber.

 

The manual construction work could also include being involved in the building of the playground boundary fence, or in the initial construction of the play hut, or play building itself. Along with the creation of play mounds which were constructed using topsoil over a brick base. In future years there was the building of brick, stone, or mud barbecue cooking areas with wooden bench seating, or the construction of a garage store for play materials.

 

The job had so many dimensions from decorating the play structures to designing footpaths for use by the disabled children with their wheelchairs. The planning of the adventure playground site itself was another area where the leader could design the layout of the play hut. With it’s rooms, facilities and the various areas on the site for specific styles of activities. Facilities such as, pre-school play areas and den building areas, the hard surface ball game area, barbecue area, and of course the entrances and exits and services to the site itself. The imaginative and creative play leaders designed such abstract and imaginative sites to meet the needs and energies of creative and energetic children of all ages and tastes.

Children from all social backgrounds were involved, including ethnic children and even those young people who were regarded as being un-clubable. These were often the adventure playgrounds greatest success. Adventure playgrounds catered for such adventurous kids who required adventure activities such as those that they formerly had access to in their secret waste ground hideouts and on the common grounds. The attraction for the play leader was no doubt the variety of the job. The adventure playground concept of catering for a mixed age group provided opportunities for older children to support the younger in many ways with projects and with the organisation of trips out from the site. The tiny tot was often being led or supported by a teenage girl, or a large lad on an aerial runway, or else going down a slide together. These were regular daily features of such exciting play environments.

 

THE KID.

 

He was his mothers pride

his sisters joy

his fathers son

his brothers ploy

 

his dreams were old when he was young

he played their games

he beat the drum

 

the soldiers he lined up for war

the cowboys n Indians

played em all

 

his games were rich

his songs were sweet

he smiled and girls were at his feet

 

his walks were plenty

his tongue was proud

he voiced his feelings

to his means

his heart was light and his steps were proud

he never followed the regular crowd

 

he danced and tripped amongst the corn

he milked the cows and stroked the horns

he picked mushrooms in early light

cockles in Shell bay were his delight

 

he caught the lizards on the grassy wareham walls

for-took of love from local girls

he daisy chained and conkers played

cigarette cards he regularly saved

he had a catapult was true

picked blackberries and berry blues

 

he told a yarn and sang a song

his verse was wild and his heart was strong

his verses they all went on

and on

and on

and on.

 

Ray Wills 

 

 

The daily planning and organisation of the playgrounds adventure activities were all part of the job, in a day in the life of the adventure playground leader. Until recent times, adventure playgrounds included pursuits such as den building and campfires, as an essential part of their successful framework. However, due to new health and safety laws and legislation, these facilities no longer exist within the adventure playground movement. Whilst both forms of play with leadership and adventure play, can be operated running parallel, side by side. With the children attending both styles of activities, such as adventure playgrounds and with play schemes operating close by, or on site. In such situations children have a wider choice and variety of activities available to them. They can choose the activity that suits their needs on any one particular day.

 

Having been successful in establishing and operating both styles of play work venues over the years I am able to see the benefits to children of both.  As well as being able to present a view of play with leadership which encompasses the best of both worlds. Children’s playtimes have always adapted to the historical environment, with many of their street rhymes and chants telling of social times, or circumstances, wars, political decisions, plagues, laws, kings, queens and even film or pop stars.

 

 Child’s play itself can be impromptu with no adult present, as in the case of the activities, games and pursuits of children on the school playgrounds waste ground alleyways and common lands. Here children have themselves devised numerous pastimes. Many of these rhymes are passed down from generation to generation, or altered to suit changing styles. These range from rhyming slang games to chase games and can include a range of activities such as the building of camps, tree houses and underground dens. To the more impromptu games of football, rounders, cricket and ad hoc unsupervised activities, though with set standards, laws, rules, procedures, or rituals.

 

Then there are the play activities, which are supervised by Adults, with leadership or recreational skills; these are organised either at schools, clubs or similar organisations. These can be sports, art and craft, or involving children in more physical skills. Here there is an emphasis on team spirit, teamwork and competitiveness.

Somewhere in between these two distinct areas of play is to be found the play work, or play with leadership disciplines, ranging from pre-school play groups, holiday play schemes, after school clubs to the more adventurous unstructured adventure playground, or play park.

 

There are however sharp distinctions between play schemes and adventure play disciplines, with adventure play having a freer atmosphere. Being less competitive and more community based and with a stronger emphasis on the individual child, whatever their social background. Here there is an emphasis on strong links with other local community leaders and with an emphasis on physical structures of play, such as climbing forts and aerial runways. A more physical environment for the children to climb, slide and to develop at their own individual pace. There are of course the various crazes, or fashions which have made their impressions over the years in the child's own play world, such as the penny-farthing bicycles, hoops, go-carts, cock horses, spinning tops, yo-yo's, marbles, dolls, skateboards and roller skates; the list is endless. 

 

                                                                                                           

The need for special play places for all children, has resulted in town planners taking child’s play into account with the provision of play spaces, toddler play space and conventional unsupervised playgrounds within housing estates. These were built professionally and situated close to their own homes and in their communities. Although without leadership, these were attractive colourful areas, though problems evolved over the years with vandalism, poor maintenance and safety issues prominent. With the dangers of falls, these became a problem. Then due to a great deal of much public concern safety surfaces became a necessity.

 

Present times demand fresh initiatives in play provision. With the growth of leisure, ‘Theme Parks’, pleasure centres and amusement centres, which have all mushroomed throughout country areas of the UK with their own distinctive style of adventure play; areas of play which are all commercially packaged to meet the needs of a mobile family. There is also the ultimate Pleasure Park; ‘Disney World’, the nearest being located in France, largely based on the American popcorn, fantasy character world.

 

The vast majority of these facilities still remain outside the financial reach of the majority of children in the U.K.  With the growth of the holiday packages, such as the Butlin style camps with their own distinctive socalled adventure play areas, crèches, nurseries, play clubs and activity clubs for children. So it is that play in it's many forms and guises, is also catered for within the holiday package industry.

 

Although the adventure playground concept is therein portrayed with its variety of wooden, or plastic styles, walkways towers, runways,slides,commando nets and their sandy safe surfaces. However, such facilities remain a poor substitute for the play leadership, community based, building activities, organisation and the active participation of the original, where children and Adults shaped and created their very own play communities. The modern package being only a minor substitute for the active, involved, all ages, interests centre, with supervision.

 

It is truly a compliment to the adventure playground ideal, that it has been so sweetly imitated on a small scale. Especially within the park play areas and play spaces that are scattered throughout our housing areas, specifically for use by small children, with their log type effects, poles, ladders slides and rope walks. All of these so attractively coloured with safety designed play surfaces, of sand, bark or rubber and a superb improvement from the original tarmac and concrete playgrounds with their dangerous metal ironmongery and wood equipment. The former play areas of static park playground equipment which has been responsible over the years for thousands of injuries to thousands of small energetic children along with the foreboding school yard playgrounds bare bleak and unimaginative places.

 

 

The child's play environment needs to be rich in daily experiences, colourful and welcoming to all ages. Such factors remain the vital and essential aspects of child’s play and that of belonging to and contributing to a cohesive friendly community unit of children of all ages and with that special adult relationship as being fundamental. Wherever I look in my search for new opportunities for children’s play needs to be fulfilled, I am still very much aware of the fact that children are still searchers themselves. They are seekers of fresh play initiatives and of places to play out their varied games, pastimes and pursuits, as they have always done from time immemorial.

 

The new play clubs and after school initiatives, are all going some way to meeting these requirements, yet it is early days. More money and above all fresh initiatives and imagination is required to fill the void left through abandoned play initiatives, during the past 20 years.

 

Initially when play projects were set up often the leader worked alone. As play leadership developed it was recognised that it was vital that there were other extra staff members available, to cope with the large numbers of children attending. Also that sound supervision and counselling relationships were necessary for such schemes to be successful.  Such working experiences were an education to others and myself in these demanding yet exhilarating situations.

 

There is no cut and dry rule to success as a play leader, it is true that mistakes were made, with wrong decisions and numerous setbacks in the many efforts to develop and establish successful adventure playgrounds, as well as other schemes in play. Therefore, much of the special creative skills for the job depended on the particular chosen sites and neighbourhood support from the local neighbourhoods, along with the may varied attributes of all involved in these demanding ventures.

 

 The job itself demanded an attitude of character rather than any particular discipline. So often, a positive vibrant personality was a blessing. From urban inner cities, housing estates, rural country areas and new towns, child’s play has made its mark on both old and new communities. Influencing the lives of thousands of children since the very first play experiments were put into practice during the early post war years. The building of their many playground camps and dens in these pioneering days, was how many children learnt to co-operate and to share with one another.

 

Often at first these dens were of flimsy constructions, often consisting of just four wooden pallet boards sides, plus a roof held together with just a few nails and a prayer. Gradually with construction experience, children became confident and adept adding extra rooms and ramps. Then as they became more skilful, adding sliding doors, or hinged trap doors, extensions and underground entrances and exits. The art of building became a matter of achievement both between competitive groups and within groups, leading to co-operation and assistance. Swaps of materials, with deals, became a common place. Such activities became an essential part of the day to day adventure playground environment of the kid’s community.

 

The ebb and flow of active kids coming and going, became an important aspect of the adventure playground, always something happening here, with new attractions, a fascination, or an event needing their attention. Kids moved freely from one activity, or interest, to another. Their fascination for and in the world around them is endless.

 

Children gain so much from trying things out, testing themselves and others from their observations and explorations. Their success depends upon the variety of resources, people and material that is available. So much depends upon the ability of the play leader and the efficiency and the co-operation of his playground management team. In many ways the adventure playground provided a miniature setting for all of life’s happenings. A place where children could contribute to the whole, whether in the playgrounds construction, the community involvement, or local life with all of the associated happenings, risks, role playing, leisure, work and its full share of day to day playground comings and goings. It was to become a metropolis of activity where children shared in the common experience of play.

 

The safety of children at play is now well recognised as essential in any future playground design, thanks to the national campaigns by ‘The National Playing Field Associations’ Safety Committee ‘R.O.S.P.A’ and ‘Safety on Playground Association’.  For many years, since my initial involvement in play work, I have had extremely strong feelings regarding play facilities that were provided by local authorities for small children. These included the poor quality of play experiences that were provided in parks, recreation grounds and schools, with their tarmac and concrete surfaces, which such playgrounds provided.  Adults always told the kids that this was what they the children really needed and wanted, for many decades. As a result, many countless kids have lost out on play opportunities and suffered from a range of accidents, caused in the main through poor planning and maintenance. I would continually bring the matter up at any opportunity to those in play work that would listen.

 

Fortunately by the 1980's, others in the field of play work had similar concerns, with the formation of the The National Playing Field Associations’ own ‘Safety on Playgrounds’ Committee. Others pressed those whom were responsible for British safety standards to look into the matter. Those in the media like Esther Rantzen and the MP Bob Hughes (former play leader) spoke on the issue, and publicly voiced their concerns.

 

Local authorities began to improve equipment and safety standards nationally. Within the county of Dorset, I had the subject aired on local radio, within the press and with support from ‘Fair Play for Children’. Whilst I was acting in a voluntary capacity, as regional officer for the ‘Safety on Playgrounds Association Action Group’.

It is important that children’s play should be recognised, as a child’s right and in particular that specific places are set aside for children's playgrounds, which desperately needed to be planned to include such adventurous activities. Children need to play whenever and wherever they are, to feel safe and secure, within they’re own neighbourhoods. They need to be encouraged to use such play facilities, with practical use, safety and free movement. Places whereby parents could both, bring, monitor and observe their children, through interaction with other children. Attractive places within pleasant environments situated within each neighbourhood, where children can play safely.. So that play itself can once again develop and become a truly social and educational experience for all children, despite there own individual circumstances, or environments 

 
 

 
 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 
 
PIONEERS OF CHILDS PLAY/PLAY PEOPLE.

 

 

In the following page I present a biograhical account of the people who played a prominent part in the development of childs play provision in the UK.

Along withothers who championed childrens play in all its varied forms.

 

W.DRUMMOND ABERNETHY.

 

 

The first time I heard of Drummond was when I was a Community Service Volunteer student in the mid sixties and I was given a copy of his N.P.F.A publication Play leadership, this was one of a variety of publications on child’s play compiled by the N.P.F.A.

 

 However it was after I had operated a successful Easter holiday play scheme in Redditch that I was seconded by Redditch District Council to Playfield house in London.

 

Playfield House was the central office of the National Playing Fields Association in central London, staffed by retired officers of the forces.

I was to attend a training course there on play leadership under the guidance of Drummond Abernethy who directed me to numerous play projects, from play parks and I o clock clubs to Adventure Playgrounds.

 

 During my training by N.P.F.A I was based at the Notting Hill Adventure Playground where I worked under the direction of Pat Smythe the leader and Francis McLennon. I reported back to Drummond at Playfield House each day.

 

In the years ahead and throughout my play career Drummond was always available and supportative and always keen to talk with me on all kinds of issues from handicapped children on playgrounds to the development of the Institute of Childs Play.

 

For many years I attended the many group meetings which were held at Playfield House along with all the pioneers of the play movement. Drummond and I continued to communicate by phone, letter and the occasional visit to the Adventure playgrounds I was responsible for.We would often meet up at the numerous play conferences and campaign sessions in London and nationally.

 

 

Drummond Abernethy had been secretary of the National Playing Fields Association Playground Committee since 1948 until his retirement in 1978 when he acted in an advisory role.. Drummond's energy and vision led to the establishment of other play projects nationally and throughout Europe.

 

He played a significant role in refining Sørenson's ideas into adventure play, speaking to local authories,play bodies and community organisations.Thus he became a known spokesman and orator on the subject of play leadership in general. The name change from junk to adventure play was designed to create a more positive public image but it also marked Drummond's extension of the original philosophy. Drummond was at that time widely viewed as being one of the most prominent figures in the development of adventure play in Britain and abroad.

 

From its first days the handicapped Adventure Play movement was also most fortunate in having the support of Drummond Abernethy. Drummond lived locally in Loughton and always had a particularly keen interest in play for disabled children. Upon his retirement from the National Playing Fields Association in 1978 Drummond became chairman of ELHAP. This was a position he retained until ill health forced him to stand down in 1986, although he remained on the executive committee until his death. A large part of ELHAP's success is attributed to Drummond. Under his guidance ELHAP developed into a thriving playground and its unique experiences have now been enjoyed by many thousands of children with disabilities.

 

. Drummond Abernethy, with his wealth of adventure play experience, used to describe ELHAP as the "very best adventure playground for children with special needs".

 

 

 

Lady Marjorie Allen of Hurtwood

(1897-1976)

  

 

 

"Better a broken bone than a broken spirit"
 

 

'I had no particular sense of vocation, and no plans for a career':
 
 Yet this unsophisticated girl, with no interest in formal education, was to make a name for herself as a landscape architect.Then later to be drawn into work for children by the injustices she saw them enduring.
 
 Remembrance of her early good fortune - an idyllic childhood on a farm in an atmosphere of security and affection and the chance to follow her own interests at a progressive school.Made her the more determined in later life to do something children 'condemned to live in barbaric and sub-human city surroundings.
 
 She was happily married to Clifford Allen, pacifist, socialist and internationalist.He helped her to clarify and present her ideas. Always a person who 'loved embarking on a practical joh and seeing it through to a successful finish.
 
 Lady Allen became a practised speaker and writer with a reputation for getting things done, nationally and internationally. She would like to be remembered for the campaign which led to the passing of the Children Act (1948) and for her work for adventure playgrounds, recently extended to include handicapped children.
 
 Lady Allen is the first to realize that the work she has chosen is never finished. But the person who, with equal energy and enthusiasm, drives earth-shifters on playground sites and undertakes lecture tours, remains undaunted by the challenge.
 
Lady Marjory Allen of Hurtwood was an able, strong and forthright advocate for children. She strove to overcome injustice and championed children’s rights, particularly for orphans, the disabled and the deprived.
 
 In Britain she was a leader of many organisations, striving to improve conditions for children and later worked with UNESCO and UNICEF on international projects.
 
She was a founder leader of L’Organisation Mondiale Pour L’Education Prescolaire’, OMEP.
Her high level international contacts brought great benefits to early years provision in Britain.
 
 As a child,Marjory Gill was brought up on a farm,within a large,loving and secure family,with much fun and affection.At Bedales School she followed her own interests and eventually became a landscape architect.Her great interest was in giving children the same opportunities as she had enjoyed by learning through good play opportunities.Nationally and internationally,she strove to improve children’s lives by tirelessly appealing to politicians,the media and influential members of society to help overcome the injustices suffered by many children.
 Her recorded speeches and articles reflect her enthusiasm and practical approach to solving problems.Lady Marjory was happily married to Lord Clifford Allen,a pacifist, socialist and internationalist.Who helped to clarify and present her ideas effectively. Their daughter was a constant inspiration to them.With great vision,determination and imagination,she inspired others to work with her in improving provision in nursery centres.During the war(1939–1945),she organised teams of skilled craftsmen to work with many voluntary groups in making stout toys and nursery equipment out of remnants from bomb sites.Neither time nor materials were wasted!
 
 Lady Allen fought to give women a choice to work or stay at home for the first two years of a child’s life.

 

 Lady Allen Link http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/subject_guides/pacifist/121.pdf 

 

Then there would be less likelihood for unfortunate children to slip through the net. Until 2004 children’s services have been fragmented, but now there is hope for more integrated services, many based in new ‘Children’s Centres’ (2006).

 

 

 

DONNE BUCK

 

 Donne Buck has been a proinent play pioner for 50 years .

 

  Heres his story  http://www.ncb.org.uk/Page.asp?originx_6215po_87243436916v71b_20092103857i

 

 WILLIAM BARNES.

 

Teacher, Minister, Mayor, Poet, Visionary.

 

William Barnes was an early proponent of childs play.
Barnes believed that if children were denied their right to play they would grow up with ill health, weak and low in spirit.
 
He campaigned for many years to keep the green open spaces for childrens natural play. He could see a time in the future when because of land development in excess and heavy traffic that there would be nowhere left for kids to play.

 

 

THE LANE

 

The children will soon have no place for to play,

                                   And if they do grow,

                                   They will have a mushroom face,

                                   With their bodies as simple as dough,

 

                             But a man is made of a child,

                                    And his limbs do grow worksome by play,

                                    And if the young child's little body is spoilt,

 

                                    Why the mans will the sooner decay,

 

                                 But wealth is worth now more than health is worth,

                                    Let it all go.

                                    If it will bring but a sovereign or two for to breed the young fox or the horse,

 

                                    We can give up a whole acre of ground,

 

But the greens be a grudged for to rear,

 

Our young children up healthy and strong,

 

Why there wont be a left the next age.

 

A green spot where their feet can go free.

 

WILLIAM BARNES.

 

 

EILEEN SOPER

 

 Eileen Soper (26 Mar 1905 - 18 Mar 1990)

 

Born in Enfield in 1905, Eileen moved at a young age to Harner Green in Hertfordshire. Soper was a gifted child, encouraged in her art by her father George, an artist himself. She developed her craft at a very young age, and had her first exhibition at the Print Makers Society of California in 1921. Queen Mary herself purchased one of Super’s prints - Flying Swings. She also was the youngest artist ever to exhibit her work at The Royal Academy in London - at the ripe age of just 15.

 

 She moved primarily to illustrating during the 1940's. Eileen Soper was an incredible artist who, over the space of almost twenty years, illustrated every one of the 21 Famous Five books - the only long Blyton series where the same illustrator was used throughout.

 

 Also in her enormous portfolio are The Moods Story Books (Happy, Merry, Jolly, Sunny, Gay, Lucky, Bright, Friendly), The first three Colours Story Books (Blue, Red, Green), Tales After Tea, Tales After Supper, The Children’s Life of Christ and Tales From The Bible (Methuen 1943 and 1944), The Train That Lost Its Way (Brockhampton 1946), All of the Macmillan short story books, The Little White Duck, Polly Piglet (Brockhampton 1943), The Twins Little Book series (Brockhampton) and The Secret of Killimoon, just to name a few.

 

Apart from her illustrations for other authors, Soper also wrote and illustrated over twenty books of her own, chiefly nature series. They include: Eileen Soper’s Book of Badgers, The Wildlife Series (Routledge c.1965), When Badgers Wake, Wild Encounters and Wild Favours (Routledge 1955, 1957 and 1963 respectively). Born in Enfield, she moved at a young age to Harner Green in Hertfordshire. Soper was a gifted child, encouraged in her art by her father George, an artist himself. She developed her craft at a very young age, and had her first exhibition at the Print Makers Society of California in 1921. Queen Mary herself purchased one of Super’s prints - Flying Swings.

 

She moved primarily to illustrating during the 1940's. Soper helped to found The Society of Wildlife Artists, and was also a member of The Royal Society of Miniature Painters. Her sister Eva was her only companion during the later part of her life, and Soper passed away only recently in 1990 at the age of 85.

 

Eileen Soper also produced so many etchings it's impossible to show them all here. Encouraged by her father in the art of printmaking from an early age, Eileen soon rivalled him in talent and surpassed him in popularity, while neatly complementing his subjects by depicting children at play.

 

Her etchings, exhibited in England at the Royal Academy from 1921, when she was only sixteen, attracted great attention, among critics, fellow artists and the general public. Eileen’s etchings concern themselves with the ordinary events that make up a child’s day, simple and perhaps monotonous to the adult but ever fresh to the child itself. The majority of her etchings deal with children at play – on the beach, in country lanes and on street corners – or with animals.

 

One of the reasons why she was able to depict such honest images of children free from nostalgia was that she was scarcely more than a child herself, producing most of the etchings whilst she was in her teens or early 20s.

 

Eileen’s early plates are characterised by a their multiple states, small sizes and focusing on one, two sometimes three, children. Her later plates reflect her growing confidence in composition. This confidence enabled her to depict a greater number of children in detailed settings without overcrowding the image, produced with fewer re-workings and states.

 

In 1930 the etching market declined and Eileen turned her skills to other forms of artistic expression. But it was not just for financial reasons that she turned away from etching. Quite simply, the child Eileen had grown up and no longer possessed the child’s frank and naïve vision of the world which had enabled her to capture children without sentimentality.

 

Apart from her illustrations for other authors, Soper also wrote and illustrated over twenty books of her own, chiefly nature series. They include: Eileen Soper’s Book of Badgers, The Wildlife Series (Routledge c.1965), When Badgers Wake, Wild Encounters and Wild Favours (Routledge 1955, 1957 and 1963 respectively). Soper helped to found The Society of Wildlife Artists, and was also a member of The Royal Society of Miniature Painters.

 

PLAY PEOPLE

                             

 

SUE TOWNEND        GYLES BRANDRETH          SORENENSON 

 

 

Lady Allen Link http://www2.warwick.ac.uk/services/library/mrc/subject_guides/pacifist/121.pdf

 

                                 

 

 CHI  

CHILDRENS GAMES TOYS AND PASTIMES THROUGHOUT HISTORY.

 

                            

 

In this section I take a look into the facinating world of childrens games toys and pastimes throughout history. From the middle ages then up to our present day.I look at the range and variety of activities and functions as well as the social enviroment and the manufacture of toys and their popularity at the time.

 

Before the regency period relationships between parents and offspring were rather formal and remote. Obediannce was regarded as being essential and children were expected to know their place. In many ways they were treated like small adults and play was regarded with little reverence.

 

Then by the late 18th century attitudes started to change rapidly as part of general shift in the values and virtues of British society, A new warmth of feeling grew up in family circles and many of the old formalities and constraints were cast away. Children for the very first time began to call their parents Mama and Papa. The new spirit was reinforced by contemporise ideas about the virtues of naturalness and liberty. These were too led to an appreciation of childhood as being a separate stage of development. As well as the need for children to have specific rights and with it a wide measure of freedom. Therfore the importance of their playtime was at last recognised and consequently many children were supplied with a wealth of new toys and games along with their own books for pleasure rather than for instruction. Children now had their nursery where they played, this was usually at the top of the house so as not to disturb the grown ups. As in earlier times parents tried to turn their children’s pastimes to educational advantage though many more toys and games were bought for their amusement. The old tradition of swaddling clothes whereby babies were wrapped up tight in clothes in which they couldn’t move was finally abandoned in favour of loose fitting clothes.

 

LATEST FINDINGS 2009

 

CHILDS FAVOURITE TOYS CAN PROVIDE CLUES TO FUTURE CAREER

  

(- 99% of architects played with LEGO®bricks -)

 

New research* from LEGO® UK reveals how children’s future careers can start to becarved out in their early years through play preferences - with architects having preferredconstruction toys, nurses most likely to have chosen dolls and IT workers having opted forcomputer games.

Architects were the professionals that were most likely to be influenced at an early stageThrough their preferred toys - construction sets.

 

The research showed that 54% of architectshad decided on their future vocation before the age of 16, compared to the British averageof 15% - highlighting that toys such as LEGO bricks can help develop creativity and life skills.

The study of more than 2,000 adults found parallels across a number of professions:- Those in caring and people professions – such as nursing, teaching and recruitment -were most likely to favour dolls and action figures- ‘Problem solvers’ in banking or accountancy were most likely to enjoy board gamesand puzzles- Marketing and advertising professionals were most likely to play with creative setssuch as painting kits and Play-Doh- IT workers preferred playing with computer consoles and gamesConstruction toys such as LEGO bricks were found to be instrumental in forming buddingarchitects’ ambitions, with 99 per cent** of architects, including Royal Academy President,Sir Nicholas Grimshaw (architect of the Eden Project), and David Chipperfield, winner of the2007 RIBA Stirling Prize, having played with the toy bricks when growing up.

Dr Nicola Pitchford, a Developmental Psychologist at the University of Nottingham says,“The toys that children gravitate towards help promote the skills they may draw on in theirfuture careers. Architects use a very clear set of logical skills which can be linked to thecognitive skills children learn and develop when playing with construction or building toyssuch as LEGO bricks. These sorts of toys also encourage the creativity that is key to theprofession as the number of constructions children can build is endless.” 

Rory McCoy, an architect with the award winning firm, Gareth Hoskins Architects says, “Iloved playing with construction sets and other building toys when growing up. I can stillremember my excitement at the sudden realisation that I could make buildings structurallysound with my LEGO bricks – I couldn’t wait to find my next big architectural discovery!”

Notes:*LEGO UK polled 2000 British people through One Poll in January 2009**LEGO UK polled 235 architects through the architectural website www.bdonline.co.uk in

January 2009

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.geocities.com/traditions_uk/play.html

 

 

 

 

 

GAMES

 

http://rmc.library.cornell.edu/games/index.html

 

 

Past Games

 

 

Toys and Games.

 

 http://www.historylives.com/toysandgames.htm

 

 

Games.

 

 http://www.literacycommunity.com/grade3/pioneercontent/games.html

 

 

Pastimes games.

 http://www.octavia.net/9thclife/PastimesGames.htm

 

Trail end 

  http://www.trailend.org /you-playtime.htm

playground fun

 http://www.playgroundfun.org.uk/

 

The Museum of Childs Play 

 

http://www.museumofplay.org/things_to_see/index.html

 

 

 

                                                          

 

 

GAMES FOR KIDS

GAMES FOR KIDS

  

 

  

 

 

Add Games To

 

Your MySpace

 

http://free-stuff.co.uk/free_online_games.php 

 

http://kids.yahoo.com/games 

 

 

Play Free Games

 

 

more free kids games

!

 

DR WHO GAMES

 

STORIES