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trying to have a playground for a new small school
posted by glosing  on Oct 2 2008
I am a special needs teacher of preschool children with autism. My school has about 120 children at the current site. Our school is the early childhood school for our county.  We have 2 inclusive 4-k classes and 1 inclusive kindergarten class. There are 10 classes of preschoolers with special ....

Worldwide Day of Play
posted by tux&dot  on Oct 2 2008
Burgess-Peterson Academy hosted it's 4th annual Worldwide Day of Play on September 27, 2008 in celebration of a Nickelodeon grant in 2004.  As an official host site, the families that came out participate in Float'r Volleyball, Football obstacle course, basketball, jump rope, bean....

Phoenix WE Play!
posted by kwilson  on Oct 2 2008
Hello Phoenix! On behalf of the Boomer Training Team, I must tell you that we're excited to meet each of you on October 10th! We have a fun and dynamic Workshop Entirely on Play just for you. This one day training will be brief (there is no playground build the following day) but memorable. You'....

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  Today in Play  Stories about play and playspaces  Lack of play: W...
 Lack of play: Whose fault is it?
 
imgOfflinealynsen
159 posts
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Joined
1/28/2008



Lack of play: Whose fault is it?
Posted: 19 May 08 11:44 AM
Columnist: Kids — go outside and play
Rosa Brooks
L.A. Times
May 18, 2008

Excerpt:

But today, for most middle-class American children, “going out to play” has gone the way of the dodo, the typewriter and the eight-track tape. From 1981 to 1997, for instance, University of Michigan time-use studies show that 3- to 5-year-olds lost an average of 501 minutes of unstructured playtime each week; 6- to 8-year-olds lost an average of 228 minutes. (On the other hand, kids now do more organized activities and have more homework, the lucky devils!) And forget about walking to school alone. Today’s kids don’t walk much at all (adding to the childhood obesity problem).

...

Well, no. We parents have sold ourselves a bill of goods when it comes to child safety. Forget the television fear-mongering: Your child stands about the same chance of being struck by lightning as of being the victim of what the Department of Justice calls a “stereotypical kidnapping.” And unless you live in Baghdad, your child stands a much, much greater chance of being killed in a car accident than of being seriously harmed while wandering unsupervised around your neighborhood.

Skenazy responded to the firestorm generated by her column by starting a new Web site — freerangekids.wordpress.com — dedicated to giving “our kids the freedom we had.” She explains: “We believe in safe kids. ... We do NOT believe that every time school-age children go outside, they need a security detail.”


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  Today in Play  Stories about play and playspaces  Lack of play: W...