THE MEANING OF PLAY IN EDUCATION
All human activity might be classified
under three heads, play, work, and drudgery, but
just what activities belong under each head and just
what each of the terms means are questions of dispute.
That the boundaries between the three are hazy and
undefined, and that they shade gradually into each
other, are without doubt true, but after all play is
different from work, and work from drudgery. Much
of the disagreement as to the value of play is due
to this lack of definition. Even to-day when
the worth of play is so universally recognized, we
still hear the criticism’s of “soft pedagogy”
and “sugar coating” used in connection
with the application of the principle of play in education.
Although what we call play has its
roots in original equipment, still there is no such
thing as the play instinct, in the sense that there
is a hunting instinct or a fighting instinct.
Instead of being a definite instinct, which means
a definite response to a definite situation, it is
rather a tendency characteristic of all instincts and
capacities. It is an outgrowth of the general
characteristic of all original nature towards activity
of some kind. This tendency is so broad and so
complex, the machinery governing it is so delicate,
that it produces responses that vary tremendously
with subtle changes in the individual, and with slight
modifications of the situation. What we call play,
then, is nothing more than the manifestations of the
various instincts and capacities as they appear at
times when they are not immediately useful. The
connections in the nervous system are ripe and all
other factors have operated to put them in a state
of readiness: a situation occurs which stimulates
these connections and the child plays. These
connections called into activity may result in responses
which are primarily physical, intellectual, or emotional all
are manifestations of this tendency towards activity.
All habits of all kinds grow out of this same activity:
habits which we call work and those which we call
play. Man has not two original natures, one defined
in terms of the play instinct, and the other in terms
of work. Most of the original tendencies involved
in play are not peculiar to it, but also are the source
of work. Manifestation results in making “mud
pies and apple pies”; physical activity results
in the kicking, squirming, and wriggling of the infant
and the monotonous wielding of the hammer of the road
mender. The conditions under which an activity
occurs, its concomitants, and the attitude of the
individual performing it determine whether it is play
or work not its source or root.
Much, then, of what we call play is
simply the manifestation of instincts and capacities
not immediately useful to the child. If they
were immediately useful, they would probably be put
under the head of work, not play. Many of the
activities which seem playful to us and not of immediate
service do so because of the conditions of civilized
life. Were the infants living under primitive
conditions, “in such a community as a human
settlement seems likely to have been twenty-five thousand
years ago, their restless examination of small objects
would perhaps seem as utilitarian as their fathers’
hunting." Certainly the tendency of little children
to chase a small object going away from them, and
to run from a large object approaching slowly, their
tendency to collect and hoard, their tendency to outdo
another engaged in any instinctive pursuit, would
under primitive conditions have a distinct utilitarian
value, and yet all such tendencies are ranked as play
when manifested by the civilized child.
Other tendencies become playful rather
than useful because of the complexity of the environment
and of the nervous system responding to it. In
actual life we don’t find activity following
a neatly arranged situation response system.
On the contrary, a situation seldom stimulates one
response, and a response seldom occurs in the typical
form required by theory. It is this mingling of
responses brought about by varying elements in the
situation that gives the playful effect. In a
less complex environment this complexity would be lessened.
Also experience, habit, tends to pin one type of response
to a given situation and the minor connections gradually
become eliminated. For example, if a boy of nine,
alone in the woods, was approached by another with
threatening gestures and scowls, the fighting response
would be called out, and we would not call it play,
because it served as protection. If the same
boy in his own garden, with a group of companions,
was approached by another with scowls, a perfectly
good-natured tussle might take place and we would call
it play. The difference between the two would
be in minor elements of the situation. Some of
these differences are absence or presence of companions,
the strangeness or familiarity of the surroundings,
the suddenness of the appearance of the other boy,
and so on.
Most of the older theories of play
did not take into account these three facts, i.e.,
the identity in original nature of the roots of play
and work; the fact that man’s original nature
fits him for primitive not civilized society; the
complexity of the situation response connection
and its necessary variation with minor elements in
the external situation and in the individual.
Earlier writers, therefore, felt the need of special
theories of play. The best known of these theories
are, first, the Schiller-Spencer surplus energy theory;
second, the Groos preparation for life theory; third,
the G. Stanley Hall atavistic theory; fourth, the
Appleton biological theory. Each of the theories
has some element of truth in it, for play is complex
enough to include them all, but each, save perhaps
the last, falls short of an adequate explanation.
Two facts growing out of the theory
of play accepted by the last few paragraphs need further
discussion. First, the order of development in
play. The play activities must follow along the
line of the developing instincts and capacities.
As the nerve tracts governing certain responses become
ready to act, these responses become the controlling
ones in play. So it is that for a time play is
controlled largely by the instinct of manipulation,
at another time physical activity combined with competition
is most prominent, at another period imagination controls,
still later the puzzle-solving tendency comes to the
point followed by all the games involving an intellectual
factor. This being true, it is not surprising
to find certain types of play characterizing certain
ages and to find that though the particular games may
vary, there is a strong resemblance between plays
of children of the same age all over the world.
It must not be forgotten, however, that the readiness
of nerve tracts to function, and therefore the play
responses, depends on other factors as well as maturity.
The readiness of other tracts to function; past experience
and habits; the stimulus provided by the present situation;
absence of competing stimuli; sex, health, fatigue,
tradition all these and many more factors
modify the order of development of the play tendencies.
Still, having these facts in mind, it is possible
to indicate roughly the type of play most prominent
at different ages.
Children from four to seven play primarily
in terms of sensory responses, imagination, imitation,
and curiosity of the cruder sort. Love of rhythm
also is strong at this period. From seven to ten
individual competition or rivalry becomes very strong
and influences physical games, the collecting tendency,
and manipulation, all of which tendencies are prominent
at this time. Ten to twelve or thirteen is characterized
by the “gang” spirit which shows itself
in connection with all outdoor games and adventures;
memory is a large factor in some of the plays of this
period, and independent thinking in connection with
situations engendered by manipulation and the gang
spirit becomes stronger. At this period the differences
between girls and boys become more marked. The
girls choose quieter indoor games, chumming becomes
prominent, and interest in books, especially of the
semi-religious and romantic type, comes to the front.
In the early adolescent period the emotional factor
is strong and characterizes many of the playful activities;
the intellectual element takes precedence over the
physical; the group interest widens, although the
interest in leadership and independent action still
remains strong; teasing and bullying are also present.
This summary is by no means complete, but it indicates
in a very general way the prominent tendencies at
the periods indicated.
The second fact needing further elaboration
is that of the complexity of the play activity.
Take, for instance, a four-year-old playing with a
doll. She fondles, cuddles, trundles it, and takes
it to bed with her. It is jumped up and down
and dragged about. It is put through many of
the experiences that the child is having, especially
the unpleasant ones. Its eyes and hair, its arms
and legs, are examined. Questions are asked such
as, “Where did it come from?” “Who
made it?” “Has it a stomach?” “Will
it die?” In many instances it is personified.
The child is often perfectly content to play with
it alone, without the presence of other children.
This activity shows the presence of the nursing instinct,
the tendency towards manipulation, physical activity,
imitation and curiosity of the empirical type.
The imagination is active but still undifferentiated
from perception. The contentment in playing alone,
or with an adult, shows the stage of development of
the gregarious instinct. A girl of nine no longer
cuddles or handles her doll just for the pleasure
she gets out of that, nor is the doll put through
such violent physical exercises. The child has
passed beyond the aimless manipulation and physical
activity that characterized the younger child.
Instead she makes things for it, clothes, furniture,
or jewelry, still manipulation, and still the nursing
instincts, but modified and directed towards more
practical ends. Imitation now shows itself in
activities that are organized. The child plays
Sunday, or calling, or traveling, or market day, in
which the doll takes her part in a series of related
activities. But in these activities constructive
imagination appears as an element. Situations
are not absolutely duplicated, occurrences are changed
to suit the fancy of the player, as demanded by the
dramatic interest. A fairy prince, or a godmother,
may be participants, but at this age the constructive
imagination is likely to work along more practical
lines. Curiosity is also present, but now the
questions asked are such as, “What makes her
eyes work?” “Why can’t she stand
up?” or they often pertain to the things that
are being made for the doll. They have to do
with “How” or “Why” instead
of the “What.” The doll may still
be talked to and even be supposed to talk back, but
the child knows it is all play; it is no longer personified
as in the earlier period. For the child fully
to enjoy her play, she must now have companions of
her own age, the older person no longer suffices.
The outdoor games of boys show the
same kind of complexity, for instance,
take any of the running games. With little boys
they are unorganized manifestations of mere physical
activity. The running is more or less at random,
arms and vocal organs are used as much as the legs
and trunk. Imitation comes in-what one does others
are likely to do. The mere “follow”
instinct is strong, and they run after each other.
The beginnings of the fighting instinct appear in the
more or less friendly tussles they have. The
stage of the gregarious instinct is shown by the fact
that they all play together. Later with boys of
nine or ten the play has become a game, with rules
governing it. The general physical activity has
been replaced by a specialized form. Imitation
is less of a factor. The hunting instinct often
appears unexpectedly, and in the midst of the play
the elements of the chase interfere with the proper
conduct of the game. The fighting instinct is
strong, and is very easily aroused. The boys
now play in gangs or groups, and the tendency towards
leadership manifests itself within the group.
The intellectual element appears again and again,
in planning the game, in judging of the possibility
of succeeding at different stages, or in settling disputes
that are sure to arise. So it is with all the
plays of children: they are complexes of the
various tendencies present, and the controlling elements
change as the inner development continues.
All activities when indulged in playfully
have certain common characteristics. First, the
activity is enjoyed for its own sake. The process
is satisfying in itself. Results may come naturally,
but they are not separated from the process; the reason
for the enjoyment is not primarily the result, but
rather the whole activity. Second, the activity
is indulged in by the player because it satisfies some
inner need, and only by indulging in it can the need
be satisfied. It uses neurone tracts
that were “ready.” Growing out of
these two major characteristics are several others.
The attention is free and immediate; much energy is
used with comparatively little fatigue; self-activity
and initiative are freely displayed.
At the other extreme of activity is
drudgery. Its characteristics are just the opposite
of these. First, the activity is engaged in merely
for the result the process counting for
nothing and the result being the only thing of value.
Second, the process, instead of satisfying some need,
is rather felt to be in violation of the nature of
the one engaged. It uses neurone tracts
that are not “ready” and at the same time
prevents the action of tracts that are “ready.”
It becomes a task. The attention necessarily
must be of the forced, derived type, in which fatigue
comes quickly as a result of divided attention, results
are poor, and there is no chance for initiative.
Between these two extremes lies work.
It differs from play in that the results are usually
of more value and in that the attention is therefore
often of the derived type. It differs from drudgery
in that there is not the sharp distinction between
the process and the result and in that the attention
may often be of the free spontaneous type. It
was emphasized at the beginning of this chapter that
the boundaries between the three were hazy and ill
defined. This is especially true of work; it may
be indistinguishable from play as it partakes of its
characteristics, or it may swing to the other extreme
and be almost drudgery. The difference between
the three activities is a subjective matter a
difference largely in mood, in attitude of the person
concerned, due to the readiness or unreadiness of
the neurone tracts exercised. The same
activity may be play for one person, work for another,
and drudgery for still another. Further, for
the same person the same activity may be play, work,
or drudgery, at different times, even within the same
day.
Which of the three is the most valuable
for educational purposes? Certainly not drudgery.
It is deadening, uneducative, undevelopmental.
Any phase of education, though it may be a seemingly
necessary one, that has the characteristics of drudgery
is valueless in itself. As a means to an end
it may serve but with the antagonistic attitude,
the annoyance aroused by drudgery, it seems a very
questionable means. Education that can obtain
the results required by a civilized community and
yet use the play spirit is the ideal.
But to have children engaged in play,
in the sense of free play, cannot be the only measure.
There must be supervision and direction. The spirit
that characterizes the activities which are not immediately
useful must be incorporated into those that are useful
by means of the shifting of association bonds.
Nor can all parts of the process seem worth while to
the learner. Sometimes the process or parts of
it must become a means to an end, for the end is remote.
But all this is true to some extent in free play digging
the worms in order to go fishing, finding the scissors
and thread in order to make the doll’s dress,
making arrangements with the other team to play ball,
finding the right pieces of wood for the hut, and
so on, may not be satisfactory in and of themselves,
but may be almost drudgery. They are not
drudgery because they become fused in the whole process,
they take over and are lost in the joy of the undertaking
as a whole; they become a legitimate means to an end,
and in so far take over in derived form the interest
that is roused by the whole. It is this fusion
of work and play that is desirable in education.
This is the great lesson of play it shows
the value and encourages the logical combination of
the two activities. Children learn to work as
they play. They learn the meaning and value of
work. Work becomes a means to an end, and that
end not something remote and disconnected from the
activity itself, but as part and parcel of it.
Thus the activity as a whole imbued with the play spirit
becomes motivated.
The play spirit is the spirit of art.
No great result was achieved in any line of human
activity without much work, and yet no great result
was ever gained unless the play spirit controlled.
It is to this interaction of work and play that each
owes much of its value. Work in and of itself
apart from play lacks educative power; it is only as
it leads to and increases the power of play that it
is of greatest value. Its logical place in education
is as a means to an end, not as an end in itself.
Play, on the other hand, that does not necessitate
some work, that does not need work in order that it
may function more fully, has lost most of its educational
value. To work in play and to play while working
is the ideal combination. Either by itself is
dangerous.
Two misconceptions should be mentioned.
First, the play spirit advocated as one of the greatest
educational factors must not be limited to the merely
physical activities, nor should it be considered synonymous
with what is easy. This characterization of play
as being the aimless trivial physical activities of
a little child is a misconception of the whole play
tendency. It has already been pointed out that
any activity which in itself satisfies, whether that
be physical, emotional, or intellectual, is play,
and all these phases of human activity show themselves
in play first. Also the fact that play does not
mean ease of accomplishment has been noted. It
is only in the play spirit that the full resources
of child or adult are tested. It is only when
the activity fully satisfies some need that the individual
throws himself whole-souled into it. It is only
under the stimulus of the play spirit that all one’s
energy is spent, and great results, clear, accurate,
and far reaching, are obtained. Ease of performance
often results in drudgery. To be play, the activity
must be suited to the child’s capacity, but
leave chance for initiative and change and development.
The second misconception is that because
present-day educators advocate play in education,
they believe that the child should do nothing that
he doesn’t want to. This is wrong on two
accounts. First, it is part of the business of
an environment to stimulate readiness depends
partly on stimulation. The child may never play
unless the stimulation is forcibly and continually
applied. Second, after all it is the result we
are most anxious for in education, and that result
is an educated adult. By all means let us obtain
this result by the most economical and effective method,
and that is by use of the play spirit. But if
the result cannot be obtained by this means because
of the character of civilized ideals, or the difficulties
of group education, or lack of capacity of the individual then
surely other methods, even that of drudgery, must be
resorted to. The point is, with the goal in mind,
adapt the material of education to the needs of the
individual child; in other words, use the play spirit
so far as is possible after that gain the
rest by any means whatsoever.
So far the discussion has been concerned
with the characteristics of the play spirit and its
use in connection with the more formal materials of
education. However, the free plays of children
are valuable in two ways first, as sources
of information as to the particular tendencies ready
for exercise at different times, and second, as a means
of education in themselves. A knowledge of just
which tendencies are most prominent in the plays of
a group of children, when they change from “play”
to “games,” the increase in complexity
and organization, the predominance of the intellectual
factors, all this could be of direct service
to a teacher in the schoolroom. But it means,
to some extent, the observation by the teacher of
his particular group of children. Such observation
is extremely fruitful. The more vigorously, the
more wholeheartedly, the more completely a child plays,
other things being equal, the better. A deprivation
of opportunity to play, or a loss of any particular
type of play, means a loss of the development of certain
traits or characteristics. An all-round, well-developed
adult can grow only from a child developed in an all-round
way because of many-sided play. Hence the value
of public playgrounds and of time to play. Hence
the danger of the isolated, lonely child, for many
plays demand the group. Hence the opportunities
and the dangers of supervision of play.
Supervision of play is valuable in
so far as it furnishes opportunities and suggestions
which develop the elements most worth while in play
and which keep play at its highest level, and in so
far as it concerns the nature of the individual child,
protecting, admonishing, or encouraging, as the case
may require. It is dangerous to the child’s
best good, in so far as it results in domination;
for domination will mean, usually, the introduction
of plays beyond the child’s stage of development
and the destruction of the independence and initiative
which are two of the most valuable characteristics
of free play. Valuable supervision of play is
art that must be acquired. To influence, while
effacing oneself, to guide, while being one of the
players, to have an adult’s understanding of
the needs of child nature and yet to be one with the
children these are the essentials of the
supervision of play.
QUESTIONS
1. Distinguish between the fighting
instinct and the instinctive basis of play.
2. Under what conditions may
an activity which we classify as play for a civilized
child be called work for a child living under primitive
conditions?
3. What kinds of plays are characteristic
of different age periods in the life of children?
4. Trace the development of some
game played by the older boys in your school from
its simpler beginnings in the play of little children
to its present complexity.
5. Name the characteristics common
to all playful activity.
6. Distinguish between play and drudgery.
7. What is the difference between work and play?
8. To what degree may the activities
of the school be made play?
9. Explain why the same activity
may be play for one individual, work for another,
and drudgery for a third.
10. Why should we seek to make
the play element prominent in school activity?
11. When is one most efficient
in individual pursuits when his activity
is play, when he works, or when he is a drudge?
12. Under what conditions should
we compel children to work, or even to engage in an
activity which may involve drudgery?
13. Explain how play may involve
the maximum of utilization of the abilities possessed
by the individual, rather than a type of activity
easy of accomplishment.
14. In what does skill in the
supervision of play consist?