Play has become a dirty word in school. I use it daily to get kids back on task, by saying, "quit playing, quit playing around, etc." With all we have to do there does not seem a place or time for play. Albert Einstein told us, "Play is the highest form of research." We know that play can lead to creativity, exploration, build relationships and enrich our lives. Why can't playing and learning happen together?
Some Chicago colleagues and I were so inspired by Kevin Carroll's 2014 ISTE keynote about his journey and the themes of play, creativity, and relationships that led to his great success. We decided this was something our kids must experience as well. Kevin was kind enough to invite us to his Chi-Talk Event in which he and his team worked to inspire Chicago's kids to listen, learn and lead and rise up. Kevin's work is truly where it started, we simply hope to continue his great work.
Ben Kovacs and I decide to work on a unit of study for our students at two very different schools. Ben works on the North side and I work on the South side, yet play is universal to us all, we decided the plan could be collaborative and reach all kids no matter their zip code. We worked to create the #ChicagoPlay site to host our inspiration, essential ideas and questions, and our kids' work. We hoped to use Kevin's inspiring work and then allow our students to play again. We aspire to have our students become ambassadors of play and bring it to others. But first, we had to bring it back to them. We started by having kids define play, what it means to them and its feelings and emotions. We let them see a great video from Kevin's work at Nike about Tag and play. The truth is, they struggled. No one has asked them about play, many of them have lost touch with play. After blogging, we looked at which words we saw the most using a word cloud.
We have work to do around play. But it's the best kind of work, it's thoughtful, inspiring, creative, imaginative, freeing. My students next task was to think outside of the box, literally. We used the book, Not a Box by Antoiniette Portis. In this book, the box can become anything you imagine. My students were nine again when we read and predicted what the box was going to be on each page. My students then had a chance to recreate, Not a Box using their imaginations and the Book Creator app. Just as the rabbit in the story is pictured simply in the box so were my students. Then they used their imaginations to create something much better than a box.
One of my students commented after finishing our work for the day with play, "I haven't used my imagination this much in a really long time." It's time to let them play.


Enjoying this so much. Great post, Autumn!
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