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Musical Monday VI: Play

3/11/2019

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Happy Musical Monday!  This is week two of digging into Every Child Ready to Read (ECRR) early literacy skills and how Education Through Music (ETM) can help build those skills.  In my last post, I started with my favorite early literacy skill - singing! Today, I’m going to continue with my other favorite early literacy skill - playing!

Past Musical Monday Posts:
  • Education Through Music
  • The Song Experience Game
  • Early Literacy in ETM
  • Every Child Ready to Read and ETM
  • Sing
The 4 Letter Word
​I have never understood why the word “play” is considered a four letter word.  I have learned that play is vital to the development and education of children, but our society deems play as “a waste of time.”  We have a system in place that wishes to rush children through childhood rather than protecting their right to play. 

We forget that play helps children explore and experience the world around them.  Play leads to imagination, creativity, and innovation - a cardboard box becomes a robot companion that goes on adventures, a stick becomes a wizard’s wand, a hula hoop becomes a portal to a new world.  Cultivating imagination in the post-modern child just may lead to discoveries that will propel our society forward - a dryer that dries AND folds clothes, flying cars, a safe and renewable energy source, or the cure to cancer.
Librarians: Guardians of Play
​Libraries are encouraging play by providing toys and games in their children’s departments. Children’s departments in libraries aren’t bastions of solitude and silence anymore.  They are full of singing, talking, exploring, and playing.  Caregivers are playing “dinosaurs” with their children, children are giving impromptu puppet shows, or families are sitting down to play a board game together.  

Playing has also been extended into library programming. Librarians are creating and facilitating programming that encourages imagination and play.   Librarians are also incorporating playtime into our age-specific storytimes.  

Librarians are making play the norm and I am 200% here for it.
The “Playground” of ETM
Mary Helen Richards defined playgrounds as something “full of wonderful things for the child to use, build with, manipulate, take apart, and put back together,”  

In ETM, the Song Experience Game (SEG) is very much like a playground or children’s department. 

Benefits of playing through the use of a SEG:
  • Children are having a shared experience with friends
  • Exploration and creativity is encouraged
  • Children learn how to navigate their surroundings (spatial awareness)
  • Children work on social interaction and communication 
The Play State
​This is a video from ETM’s 2017 conference.  We start and end each day singing and playing as a large group.  It is the BEST way to start and end a day!
As you watch this video what do you notice - 
  • Do you see engagement?
  • Do you see joy?
  • Do you see human interaction and connection?
When I get to experience the singing and playing of ETM SEGs, I find that I am happier, more engaged, and I am more regardful of others.  If I can experience those benefits as a 33-year old, can you imagine the benefits for a 3 year old?  

For children, the play state has a slew of benefits:
  • They are actively engaged - they are 100% in it to win it
  • They are experiencing enjoyment and a genuine pleasure from the activity
  • There is (playful) structure and routine which provides children with a sense of safety, but also encourages them to take risks.  
  • Increased motivation
  • Stronger language skills and symbolic thinking
Playing in Storytime
When I facilitated Lapsit, I liked to tack on 10-15 minute playtime at the end.  It provided babies with an opportunity to explore our various age appropriate toys and caregivers with an opportunity to socialize and share stories.  During this time, I like to talk with the caregivers and play with the babies.  Aside from the total complete joy of getting to interact with a baby, I also had an opportunity to foster relationships with the caregivers.  

In my years of study of ETM, I realized how important it is to allow yourself to be a little vulnerable and be completely silly because it shows children that this is a safe space to explore, play, and imagine.  This session of Tales for 2s and 3s, I used an ETM favorite that I adapted “Come Along and Walk with Me” as our hello song.  Each week we sing “Come Along and Wave with Me”.  The last action that we do is “come along and wiggle with me.”  Every week when it is time to wiggle, the kids all look at me expectantly because they know that this is the part where Ms. Nicole gets super dooper silly.  Every week they laugh and wiggle along with me.  Every week, we play.

My goal as a librarian is to make play the norm in storytime.  Whether it is through using a SEG, reading an interactive picture book, playing a guessing game on the flannel board, or adding on some time for children to play at the end of storytime.  I want caregivers and children to know that play is a far more effective learning tool than flashcards, apps, and standardized testing will ever be.  Play is part of the human experience.  It allows us to create, marvel, and engage with one another. 
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  • Sew Bookish Blog
  • Nicole's Song Book
  • E-Portfolio
    • Resume
    • Reflection
    • Artifacts >
      • Goal 1 >
        • Outcome 1A
        • Outcome 1C
        • Outcome 1D
      • Goal 2 >
        • Outcome 2B
        • Outcome 2C
        • Outcome 2D
      • Goal 3 >
        • Outcome 3A
        • Outcome 3B
        • Outcome 3D
      • Goal 4 >
        • Outcome 4A
        • Outcome 4B
        • Outcome 4C
      • Goal 5 >
        • Outcome 5A
        • Outcome 5C
        • Outcome 5D