Lots of Different Things for Play and Pretending
Thoughts for the Week:
Some
people talk about play as if it were a relief from serious learning; but, for
children, play is serious business. It provides a way for them to express
strong feelings about important events in their lives. Play gives children a
chance to work out problems on their own, to cope with anxieties, and to
prepare for life as an adult by pretending about being grown up. Through play,
children discover the world and learn more about themselves.
When given the opportunity, children tend to choose playthings that suit their
developmental needs. You may have seen a young child put aside a newly acquired
toy in favor of the empty carton or the brightly colored wrapping paper. A
child may spend a long time playing happily with an empty cereal carton, or
banging on a metal pot with a wooden spoon. That's because young children's
imaginations are engaged by almost everything they see. In the same way, it's often
rewarding for older children to make their own playthings out of everyday
household things. That way they can be imaginative and involved in making the
toys as well as in playing with them.
-- Fred Rogers
Summary of the Week:
For children,
play is serious business and this week focuses on the importance of play,
playthings and imagination.
Viewers see
toys that are manufactured, toys that are collected and toys made from everyday
items -- plus imagination. There's also a visit with a gymnast who talks about
the need for practice and discipline.
In the
Neighborhood of Make-Believe, a mystery unravels as the neighbors try to
discover what toy is in the locked room of the Museum-Go-Round, and Prince
Tuesday encounters the joys and frustration of owning his first two-wheel bike.