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The Value of Play: A Common Good Initiative to Restore Recreation to America's Youth

Fear of lawsuits, excessive safety regulations, and society’s growing aversion to risk have fundamentally altered the nature of play and recreation in America.  Playgrounds have become boring – stripped of seesaws, swings, and jungle gyms – and recess is becoming a thing of the past.  Opportunities for sledding, swimming, and diving are disappearing as well.  Yet we know that play is critical to children’s physical, social, and mental health.  And the loss of recreational opportunities is particularly troubling in this age of rising childhood obesity rates. 

Because of this, Common Good is working to protect and restore play and recreational opportunities to American life.  We are currently developing legislative solutions and raising awareness of the effects that removing all risk from our children has on their lives.  


FEATURED STORY

Obesity: What's needed to encourage a culture of fitness?

At NewTalk.org, a new online forum for thought leaders, experts in medicine, fitness, government, etc. examined the societal factors that have led to the obesity crisis and how to combat it. 

One expert, Hara Marano, Editor-at-large of Psychology Today and author of A Nation of Wimps, commented on the importantce of parents embracing the "value of play":

"[O]ne of the major reasons schools have been able to get away with eliminating recess and play is that parents have no clear understanding that play has any benefits other than pleasure. There has been very minimal parental response, let alone protest, over many of the changes at schools with regard to activity.

In order for change at many other levels, it is essential that parents understand the value of play. For this there needs to be a large public education campaign about the value of play. Against this backdrop, it will be much easier to implement many of the policy and program suggestions aired in this discussion."

RECENT NEWS

Taking Play Seriously
New York Times Magazine

Go and Play
The Buffalo News

For Youngsters, Leaps and Boundaries
New York Times

Lackluster Playgrounds
Wicked Local (Salem, MA)

No Time for Fun: Parents and Children in 'Play Crisis'
Wall Street Journal

Reinventing Recess: Schools Try to Play It Safe
Dallas Morning News

Obese Kids Face Higher Risk of Heart Disease in Adulthood
Wall Street Journal

Sports Injuries and Your Children
Signal (CA)

Children ‘Over-Protected from Risk’
Western Mail (UK)

» More on parks and playgrounds
» More on recess

DID YOU KNOW?

A 2006 survey conducted by the National Parent Teacher Association found, in part, that:

Nine out of ten teachers say “recess and the free time spent with peers is an important part of the school day and is crucial to a child’s social and emotional development”; and 

Three-fourths of PTA leaders say that taking a break in the day helps kids concentrate and more than half think kids are less disruptive after recess.

(“Press Release: Recess Is at Risk, New Campaign Comes to the Rescue,” The National Parent Teacher Association, March 13, 2006)

RECOMMENDED READING:
Cotton Wool Kids

"If we never took a risk our children would not learn to walk, climb stairs, ride a bicycle or swim; businesses would not develop innovative new products, move into new markets and create wealth for all; scientists would not experiment and discover; we would not have great art, literature, music and architecture." --Sir Digby Jones,
Cotton Wool Kids

THE VALUE OF PLAY: A Forum on Risk, Recreation, and Children’s Health

In May 2006, the AEI-Brookings Joint Center and Common Good convened a conference to consider the relationship between America’s growing aversion to risk and the development and health of our children. Learn more.

SELECT RESOURCES ON PLAY

Risk, Responsibility and Regulation -- Whose risk is it anyway?
Better Regulation Commission (Great Britain), October 2006

The Importance of Play in Promoting Healthy Child Development and Maintaining Strong Parent-Child Bonds American Academy of Pediatrics, October 9, 2006

Cotton Wool Kids: Releasing the Potential for Kids to Take Risks and Innovate
HTI (Great Britain), 2007

Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder
Richard Louv, 2005. 

» Facts supporting the importance of play

» Quotes and book excerpts