This chapter develops themes providing insights into the meaning of play-based learning and what it means to practitioners working in a range of contexts with early learners in the age range of birth to eight years. Play-based learning is defined as young learners constructing knowledge as they explore, experiment, discover and solve problems in playful and unique ways. Development is linked to play and viewed as a pattern of continuous, interrelated changes that begins at birth and continue through life span whilst learning is a change in behaviour. In the early years it is through experience in play that learning occurs. The definition of curriculum in this chapter presents a context for young learners demonstrating how play-based learnin...
Play as a learning practice increasingly is under challenge as a valued component of early childhood...
This article focuses on the possibilities of teaching in a play-based curriculum, which has become a...
Play and children’s learning are the two things that cannot be separated, as play appears to be chil...
The idea of play-based learning in the early years prior to school entry has long been a fundamental...
This open access book develops a theoretical concept of teaching that is relevant to early childhood...
This chapter establishes that children’s play is at the heart of their learning and development. Pla...
This open access book develops a theoretical concept of teaching that is relevant to early childhood...
This chapter introduces the notion of play and how children make sense of their world through play. ...
This chapter considers challenges associated with the status of play, specifically, of integrating p...
The diverse benefits of play, especially for young children, have been cited for decades (Barnett,...
This article is a theoretical discourse which examined the role of play as an indispensable entity f...
Play is viewed as essential to learning and development in early years education and underpins curri...
Play is a voluntary, spontaneous, flexible, and pleasurable activity that is a child’s natural, auto...
This chapter highlights the inextricable links between play, learning and literacy in the preschool ...
To children, playing means learning and learning means playing. For it is through play that they lea...
Play as a learning practice increasingly is under challenge as a valued component of early childhood...
This article focuses on the possibilities of teaching in a play-based curriculum, which has become a...
Play and children’s learning are the two things that cannot be separated, as play appears to be chil...
The idea of play-based learning in the early years prior to school entry has long been a fundamental...
This open access book develops a theoretical concept of teaching that is relevant to early childhood...
This chapter establishes that children’s play is at the heart of their learning and development. Pla...
This open access book develops a theoretical concept of teaching that is relevant to early childhood...
This chapter introduces the notion of play and how children make sense of their world through play. ...
This chapter considers challenges associated with the status of play, specifically, of integrating p...
The diverse benefits of play, especially for young children, have been cited for decades (Barnett,...
This article is a theoretical discourse which examined the role of play as an indispensable entity f...
Play is viewed as essential to learning and development in early years education and underpins curri...
Play is a voluntary, spontaneous, flexible, and pleasurable activity that is a child’s natural, auto...
This chapter highlights the inextricable links between play, learning and literacy in the preschool ...
To children, playing means learning and learning means playing. For it is through play that they lea...
Play as a learning practice increasingly is under challenge as a valued component of early childhood...
This article focuses on the possibilities of teaching in a play-based curriculum, which has become a...
Play and children’s learning are the two things that cannot be separated, as play appears to be chil...