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Sunday, September 12, 2010

Live Blogging: SAS-HSBC Kinder K(C)ollege Conference Day 4

Today is the fourth day of the Sa Aklat Sisikat (SAS)-HSBC Kinder K(C)ollege Conference. Last week, the whole Sunday was spent learning and relearning educational theories and psychology concepts that are essential to preschool instruction. Ms. Germelina Salumbides did a great job at encapsulating important concepts and pedagogy for preschool teaching.

On this last day of the conference Teacher Ria Tirazona of Playschool International, is providing a session on the different learning styles and strategies to understand and appreciate children with special needs. What made me sit up and listen was her presentation on the essentials of play. Here are my notes from her discussion --

Play stimulates the brain. With out play, higher thinking is impossible to achieve.

Play encourages holistic development as it covers mental and cognitive challenges; emotional and social responses; and physical experiences that contribute to good health.

There are many kinds of play - free play, guided play and directed play.

Children go through stages of play - solitary play, onlooker play, parallel play, associative play.

Responses to the different kinds and stages of play is an indicator of the child's current mental, emotional, social and developmental maturity.

Play is THERAPY.


I look back at my own childhood and recall the amount of play I did. It's never too late to catch up on lost play time.

2 comments:

  1. thank you teacher zarah for a wonderful day :-) i enjoyed sharing my insights with the teachers and i hope they are able to use these in their own classrooms.

    Yes....play is an essential part of life...even for adults!

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  2. It's about six years ago when I initially picked up my very first Mark Walden book. It was at the Federation of Children's Book Groups Annual Conference and was from one of the lovely people at Bloomsbury. It was an especially shiny copy of which I'm sure many of you will already be familiar with and have some knowledge about. If so, then you'll understand how this book got me hooked on the series and made me a huge fan of Mark Walden's work. 

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