Skip to main content

Posts

Showing posts from March, 2026

Weeks 1–2: Understanding the Essence and Dimensions of Play

Diving into the core concepts of play during the first couple of weeks completely shifted my perspective. I used to think of play simply as a well-deserved break from lessons, but I now see it as the actual engine behind early childhood learning. The material really emphasized that true play has to come from the child and it needs to be intrinsically motivated, freely chosen, and focused on the journey rather than the end product, all while being fueled by active engagement and genuine joy. When I looked at my own classroom through this lens, I had a bit of an eye-opening moment. I realized how easily we, as teachers, can accidentally hijack play by over-structuring things. For example, during my teaching practice I taught Science for class V. During that in each and every game I design for the class, I would personally dictate every details and rules of the game. The moment I did that, the free choice vanished, and it stopped being actual play. This taught me that if I want to honor h...

World Cafe

 "The World Café session completely re-emphasized something we often forget: you cannot piece a child's development into isolated boxes. Everything is connected, and play is the glue." Collaborating in our group during the World Cafe was an incredible exercise in perspective-shifting. Getting to alternate between hosting discussions and traveling to other tables gave me a different view of how play drives early childhood learning. As I moved from table to table, I began to see how beautifully the different domains blend into one another. For instance, we discussed how Literacy and Language thrive when kids are given the freedom to chat and negotiate during play, which naturally builds their confidence. This flows directly into Creative and Imaginative play , where they experiment with new concepts on their own terms. When it comes to Mathematics , hands-on play takes the anxiety out of numbers, it makes logic meaningful, even if the learning curve is subtle and slow. We ...

Play Theories

 "A teacher who doesn't understand play will look at children and see chaos, a teacher who does understand play looks at that exact same scene and sees development in motion." Honestly, this particular class completely reframed how I view early childhood education. I used to think play was just what kids did when they were done with the "important" stuff. Now, I see it as the actual engine behind their learning and growth. As future teachers, we absolutely have to master these concepts not just so we can run better classrooms, but so we can advocate for our students when parents or school leaders push for rigid, less-effective academic drilling. The highlight of the day for me was the group activity right at the start. Before the teacher even pulled up the lecture slides, we were grouped together to contrast old-school and modern ideas about play. Hearing my friends these concepts was incredibly eye-opening. It made me realize that our mindset changes the entire...

Introduction

The purpose of this reflective portfolio is to analyze the core pedagogical themes of our weekly learnings, linking foundational theory to practical primary school teaching. Play-based learning has long been misunderstood as a simple timeout from academic labor; in reality, it is the vital catalyst for a child's cognitive and holistic growth. To truly harness its power, modern educators must look beyond traditional methods. This involves understanding the evolving stages of child play, engineering the classroom layout to serve as an active partner in learning, blending gamification with academic objectives, and trading rigid testing for continuous, meaningful assessment.