What Happens When ‘Play’ Is Left Out of the School Curriculum — from edsurge.com by Fatema Elbakoury
When two birds flew into my classroom, I realized how much teachers lose when we don’t trust students to play.
Due to the rigidity of curriculum, standardized tests and the controlling nature of compulsory education, playfulness and unstructured time are seen as detrimental to a student’s learning. But what is learning and why is play seen as so antithetical to teaching? What if we centered playfulness and unstructured time in our classrooms, even when it has nothing to do with the curriculum? Part of learning is acquiring knowledge through experience. If play is an experience it, too, can result in the acquisition of knowledge.
Campus webinar: The art of bringing creativity and fun into the classroom — from Times Higher Education
In our latest webinar, we spoke to three experts from Campus+ partner across the UK to discuss creative and fun ways to get students engaged, both online and in the classroom.
Gary Burnett from Loughborough University, Simon Brownhill from the University of Bristol and Kelly Edmunds from the University of East Anglia talked to us about:
- Creative and fun ways to get students engaged, in-person and online
- Tapping into students’ creativity for better learning outcomes
- Creating a culture of creativity and experimentation
- Breaking down disciplinary boundaries for learning and collaboration
- Creative ways to bring AI into classroom activities and assignments
- Play as a powerful teaching tool