Sensory Play
66 pages
English

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66 pages
English
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Description

Sensory Play draws upon current research findings and observations to present an informative and practical guide to maximising children's sensory play opportunities. This guide enables practitioners to understand the values and benefits of sensory play, incorporating case studies and current research findings to make practical links to the EYFS. Sensory play is set within a wider context, highlighting links to child development theories. This title explains how sensory play can be a valuable tool in delivering curriculum outcomes in a wide variety of settings.

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 09 mai 2016
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781907241918
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 5 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0574€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Books
ISBN 978-1-907241-23-9
9 7 8 1 9 0 7 2 4 1 2 3 9
Books Sensory Play
SENSORY PLAY
à  Hé ÉŚ
• How to explore sensory-rich play with children in the early years, and children with special educational needs • How sensory play links to the EYFS • How to appraise the sensory environment and maximise sensory provision Sue Gascoyne
Books
Sensory Play
Contents
Play în the EYFS
Introducing sensory play
Our amazing senses
Sensory play in action
Sensory play and special educational needs
Curriculum links
The adult’s role
Conclusion
Further references
For Freya and Zach, for teaching me all they know about sensory play.
Published by Practical Pre-School Books , A Division of MA Education td, St Jude’s Church, Dulwich Road, Herne Hill, ondon, SE24 0PB Tel 020 7738 5454 www.practicalpreschoolbooks.com
© MA Education td 2011
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Front cover photos clockwise from left: © iStockphoto.com/Don Barens, © iStockphoto.com/Jeffrey Stroh, © MA Education td 2011/Ben Suri, © Sue Gascoyne 2011 Illustrated by Cathy Hughes
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopied or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher.
Play in the EYFS: Sensory Play ISBN: 978-1-907241-23-9
Introducing sensory play
What is sensory play?
Imagine a walk in the woods; a visit to the seaside; a child mixing and splodging paint with a fat brush, or better still their îngers; or building with smooth wooden blocks. What do these all have in common? Each experience is inextricably linked to the senses. For example, the woodland walk conjures up crunching leaves underfoot while dappled light casts on tree trunks ripe for climbing. A trip to the seaside oers the satisfaction of shaping wet sand, creating channels for frothing water and the taste of salty air. Painting gives the pleasure and cold silky feel of paint or the visual explosion of colour as shades mix and loop. Block play oers the opportunity to create imaginary castles with cool wooden blocks satisfyingly clinking. The essence of the experience is both captured and conveyed through the colour and lights, sounds, feel, warmth, smells and taste.
Activity
Try to imagine a vivid childhood play memory where one or more of your senses was really prominent. What do you think makes it so vivid? How does it make you feel?
Compare these experiences to the visual focus and passive nature of watching television or playing computer games – just two of the trends in 21st century play cited in a recent research project (Sue Gascoyne, January 2010). Or visit the average toy shop, with shelf upon shelf of brightly coloured toys, some of which Lash, bleep or talk, and the visual (and to a lesser extent auditory) focus of many toys is apparent. Opportunities for children to actually touch or taste are often discouraged, or limited to plastic. Play now primarily takes place indoors, where temperatures are constant, and smells and environmental sounds masked. All this contributes to play where sensory experience is limited. Contrast this with the vivid childhood play memories you may have of running barefoot through grass,
making mud pies, and rose petal perfume and the appeal of multi-sensory play is evident.
Activity
For a reminder of the sensory limitations of plastic, close your eyes and place your hand in a bag of brightly coloured plastic toys. As the visual stimulus is removed, the appeal and ‘dierentness’ of these toys quickly disappears.
For something so fundamental to children’s growth and development, deînitions of sensory play itself are remarkably elusive! Sensory play is essentially play that engages one or more of the senses. As such most play clearly has the potential to be sensory. Sensory play diers to other types of play in that the sensory focus adds a signiîcant and integral extra dimension to the play. Usher (2010) deînes
sensory play as “play that provides opportunities for children ... to use all their senses, or play that encourages the use of one particular sense”. Sensory play is commonly accessed in the outdoor environment, and some forms, like sand and water play, can be intrinsically messy – although this is something for us adults to embrace rather than dread! As the previous examples amply show, many sensory-rich play opportunities surround us in our everyday lives, without costing a penny. Most children are hardwired to know how to ‘do’ sensory play and need no instructions when faced with sand, mud or water. Rather it is us adults who may have lost sight of the awe and wonder that such open-ended materials oer, the limitless possibilities and opportunities for quiet reLection, and the fact that some mess or even the momentary appearance of disorder (it is perfectly natural for children to combine objects and resources), is deînitely worth the eort. The essential ingredients of quality play have been identiîed by some as space, time and materials. When it comes to sensory play this is all the more important as children need to be given the space, time, and permission to truly experience the sensory-rich qualities of materials.
Our amazing senses
If asked about our senses most people would probably cite the îve senses of sight, smell, sound, touch and taste. Although these external senses are vital, as we will discover in chapter two, the lesser-known but crucially important inner or ‘sixth’ senses detect position, balance, movement, and more. Similarly, when we think of our senses, our eyes, ears and nose spring to mind, but really our whole body is a sensory organ as the skin around our sense organs, such as the inner ear, is packed with receptors to detect touch, pressure, heat, cold and pain. From birth, babies’ senses are tuned to detecting touch, space, their mother’s smell, voice and repeated sounds. Hughes gives the example of a baby who had already grown accustomed to the theme tune of Coronation Street from exposure in the womb and on hearing it as a newborn, turned towards the sound and “suddenly became alert and responsive” (Anita Hughes, 2006, p.18).
Introducing sensory play
Processing sensory information
Every sensory experience provides the foundations upon which all subsequent knowledge, thought and creativity are based. Each time a child (or indeed an adult) encounters a sensory stimulus a neuron (brain cell) connects to another neuron, establishing new connections in the brain. Signals Low along these complex neural networks, from one neuron to another, allowing the brain cells to communicate with each other by relaying information about emotions as well as everything we see, hear, taste, touch and smell. Each new sensory stimulus adds to the network, while repeated experiences increase the thickness and strength of the connections, helping signals to travel faster (Nancy Wartik & aVonne Carlson-Finnerty, 1993). In this way each of us will develop a unique network of nerve connections created from our own unique sensory experiences, which means that ‘the richer our sensory experiences the more intricate will be the patterns for learning, thought and creativity’ (Carla Hannaford, 1995, p.30).
Returning to that walk in the woods, when we hear the word ‘woods’ all our experiences relating to woods come to mind (see diagram 1). Be it climbing trees, the feeling of achievement having balanced on a fallen log, feeling the texture of bark, scrunching leaves, looking up through the leaf canopy or walking through leaf litter. Memories of the rush of air on the face and scent of the forest while cycling through a wooded glade, the thrill of playing hide and seek or being chased, the exhilaration of swinging on a rope or warmth of dappled light. Smelling moss and rotting leaves, foraging for fungi, the satisfaction of peeling away rotten bark and revealing scurrying woodlice, intricate patterns made by the sun and leaves, the sound of bird song and so on. All these dierent sensory-rich experiences can potentially be accessed from the word ‘woods’. Broad-based knowledge depends upon a multitude of separate multi-sensory images and memories, developed and reshaped from a wealth of separate, yet interlinked, sensory experiences. Without the unique sensory experiences and memories that we attach to words, they would lack resonance and real meaning. Thus someone can only truly
Introducing sensory play
Diagram 1: Just some of the different sensory experiences a walk in the woods can offer
The texture of bark
peeling away rotten bark
Walking through leaf litter
rush of air on the face
Balancing on a log
the warmth of dappled light
Looking up through a leaf canopy
WOODS
intricate patterns of the sun and leaves
The smell of moss and rotting leaves
Cycling through Seeing the woods scurrying woodlice Foraging scent of the forest for fungi Climbing trees The sound of birdsong Scrunching leaves
Table 1: Examples of sensory-rich play
Sand Water, bubbles, ice
Pebbles and shells
A treasure basket - a basket of natural and household objects
Pastry, playdough, plasticine etc
eaves, twigs, moss etc Shaving foam, gloop, paint Mud
String, fabric, buttons etc
Dried rice, pasta, couscous, lentils and seeds etc
understand snow by actually feeling it themselves. No amount of stories and pictures will convey its essence or replace the magic of encountering snow îrst hand.
Activity
Imagine describing snow, ice, or couscous to a visitor from another world for whom words have limited meaning. See how diïcult it is to do, how many dierent words you need to use and how far the visitor is from understanding the sensation of touching these îrst-hand.
Tapping into this amazing connectivity, richness and immediacy of thought is key to bringing a curriculum to life. As we shall discover in chapter îve, the senses can help make learning relevant and real. The draft framework of the revised EYFS highlights the need for explorative play, active learning and critical thinking, recognising the importance of “igniting children’s curiosity and enthusiasm for learning, and for building their capacity to learn and to thrive” (Department for Education, July 2011, p.5). Crowe recognises that “without meaning words are useless ... words are connectors ... children’s senses cry out to be used îrst to provide the experiences that they will later need in order to connect. Children must feel their world, listen to it, see it, taste it, smell it, ‘know’ it...That takes time and a great deal of silent investigation in peace and privacy” (Brenda Crowe, 1983, p.39). We return to focussed investigations in chapter three, as children explore unusual natural objects with sand and water.
Dierent parts of the brain are associated with dierent functions and are broadly responsible for processing dierent sensory information from the eyes, ears etc. But as we shall discover in chapter two this does not happen in isolation. The brain integrates all of the dierent pieces of information in order to make sense of the world. Experiments have shown just how powerful the dierent senses are in ultimately decoding experiences. For example,
Introducing sensory play
Activity
Try the experiment opposite yourself by adding food colour or Lavourings to drinks to see if it changes other people’s perceptions of taste.Always check allergîes irst.
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