Characteristics of
Effective Learning: play and exploration in action
Introduction
Characteristics
of Effective Learning (CoEL) are a revived element in the current Early Years
Foundation Stage Curriculum (EYFS). CoEL advocate that in planning and guiding
children’s activities, practitioners must reflect on the different ways that
children learn, and then reflect these in their practice. A child’s individual
learning characteristic will determine the way they respond to both the
teaching and learning taking place in the environment. Three
characteristics of effective teaching and learning identified by the EYFS are:
- playing and exploring - children investigate and
experience things, and ‘have a go’;
- active learning - children concentrate and
keep on trying if they encounter difficulties, and enjoy achievements; and
- creating and thinking critically - children have and develop
their own ideas, make links between ideas, and develop strategies for
doing things.
The focus
of the CoEL is on how children learn rather than what they learn i.e. process
over outcome. Underpinning the CoEL is the understanding that during their
earliest years, children form attitudes about learning that will last a
lifetime. Children who receive the right sort of support and encouragement
during these years will be creative, and adventurous learners throughout their
lives. Children who do not receive this sort of support and interaction are
likely to have a much different attitude about learning later on in life.
Hence, why the supportive practitioner, and the environment they provide, need
to nurture these CoELs to occur, but without forgetting that children are
individuals who bring their own needs, talents and histories to the learning
environment.
Playing and Exploring
In a busy
foundation stage setting, 3 year old Lara is at the mark making area where the
activity is to trace your names. Lara sits on her chair shifting back and
forth, you can see the concentration on her face as her frown forms and the tip
of her tongue is out as she traces her name. She then looks around at her
friends on the carpet area who are engrossed in a book and giggling. Lara turns
back to her name tracing, she then looks back at them again. A practitioner
deployed at the area is encouraging her to write and notices her distraction.
She says to Lara “when you finish what you are doing then you can go and play”.
Lara continues being distracted by the group and the completion of her task.
The practitioner then intervenes and says “Lara what do you want to do? You
either finish this or go and play”. Naturally Lara opts for the play and runs
off to the group on the carpet. After a few minutes, Lara returns to the mark
making table and sits back to trace her name. The practitioner turns to her and
says “I thought you went to play?” Lara’s response “But I am playing!”
This
observation of practice taken from my visit records is a vital start to this
article when discussing one of the three characteristics of effective learning
– playing and exploring. Lara’s response “But I am playing!” is
evidence that playing and exploring is a child’s work; it’s what they do, and
they do not separate it from what is happening around them in their learning
environment. It is therefore a vital characteristic of their effective
learning. A characteristic is a trait or quality of something, and therefore
playing and exploring is regarded as a key characteristic because it is about
engaging the child through a trait that comes naturally to them – “But I am
playing!” An engaging and stimulating play environment provides opportunities
for this CoEL to be experienced and crafted (Haughton and Ellis, 2013, p.82).
Play and
exploration in early years settings means children are able to choose
activities (or create experiences) where they can engage with other children or
adults or sometimes play alone, and during these activities and experiences
they learn by firsthand experience – by actively ‘doing’ (DCSF, 2007). In order
for this characteristic to come alive in the environment children need
sufficient space, time and choice with a range of activities and experiences,
some of which have been planned and prepared by the practitioners on the basis
of their observations of individual children’s current interests, talents,
learning styles and stages of development. Therefore the playing and exploring
element of the CoEL is all about the engagement of children with their learning
environment.
Taking
the criteria from page 6 of the Development Matters Framework, I
have provided some observation records where clearly the CoEL of playing and
exploring can be observed in action. Can you identify the stated bullet points
below from the Development Matters document within the
observations that follow?
Finding out and exploring
This is
when children use open-ended, hands on experiences which arise from curiosity.
These provide the basis on which the child builds concepts, tests ideas and
finds out how things work:
• Showing
curiosity about objects, events and people
• Using
senses to explore the world around them
•
Engaging in open-ended activity
• Showing
particular interests
9 month
Jerry crawled along the floor near to a mirror which was the length of the
wall. He sat and looked at himself and then raised his hands to touch the
mirror, he giggled. Jerry then noticed another child through the mirror and
squealed. He babbled something and raised both hands as to grab the other child
through the mirror. At that moment a practitioner came along and hung some
aprons on a hook over one part of the mirror. As she did this, Jerry could not
see himself in the mirror nor the other child. Instead the aprons were in his
sight. He looked at them for a while and then turned around, he could now see
the other child again. He looks back to the mirror and sees the apron. Jerry
does this three times. He then decides to bend right down under the aprons and
can see the mirror again and smiles through it as he sees the other child. He
looks around at him, he then bends down again and sees him and giggles. Jerry
then sits up in front of the aprons and this time tilts to the side where he
sees the child through the mirror again.
This
observation record makes evident that children learn from everything that they
do. During play children will begin by exploring and experimenting with what
interests them by looking about, listening to and taking in the goings on of
their environment by observing, clearly demonstrated by Jerry. Jerry touched
the mirror and moved around the space as if seeking answers to the
question ‘how does this work?’ Jerry, through his play and
exploration, investigated that when he turned he saw the child, but when back
to the mirror it was blocked by the aprons. He then worked through his
curiosity and exploration to find out how he needed to move in order to see the
other child through the mirror again.
Playing with what they know
This
refers to how a child uses imaginative play to understand, explore and embed
ideas. Children use imaginative play to re-create experiences:
• Pretending
objects are things from their experience
•
Representing their experiences in play
• Taking
on a role in their play
• Acting
out experiences with other people
2 and
half year old Shola is in the home corner and role playing a doctor. Using a
funnel from the sand and water area, Shola places it on a teddy bears chest and
puts her ear to the funnel. Another child comes in and Shola tells her that she
is “listening to teddy, he is sick”. She then asks teddy to open his eyes wide
and show her his tongue. She praises the teddy and rewards him with a sticker.
Later that day, a practitioner shared this observation with Shola’s father. He
told the practitioner that Shola had visited the GP the evening before for a
routine check up.
Shola’s
father’s input has placed into context the imaginative play being experienced
by her. She used the teddy and funnel as objects from her experience and
represented her own experience of visiting a doctor through the teddy. However,
this time she decided to take on the role of the doctor rather than the
patient. Play and learning takes place in contexts that are familiar to Shola.
She shared her experience and understanding with the other child who joined in
the play and exploration. This emphasises what Vygotsky (1978) states as
learning being a social activity. Shola’s play is shaped by the interactions
she has with people in her life, and she was able to co-construct her
understanding of the world and how she lives in it. Understanding and making
sense of the world is very much rooted in what Shola knows and the everyday
events in her life by re-creating new (the doctor) and familiar roles (her as
the teddy), by playing with what she knows.
Being willing to have a go
This is
when children use their particular interests to initiate activity ideas, look
for challenges and opportunities within new experiences and to take risks.
Children demonstrate a ‘have a go’ attitude and use new opportunities to learn:
•
Initiating activities
• Seeking
challenge
• Showing
a ‘can do’ attitude
• Taking
a risk, engaging in new experiences, and learning by trial and error
3 ½ year
old Gassy was in the outdoor area and as she knelt down near the soil on the
grass she found something poking out at her. She plucked it out with her
fingers and looked at it. It was a toy car full of dirt. She brought it over to
the practitioner and explained how she found it. Gassy then said “what else
could be buried there?” the practitioner said “I wonder too, are you going to
find out?”. Gassy jumped and said yes, so the practitioner asked her how she
intended to do so. Gassy responded by saying she didn’t know but will see. She
then went over to the sand tray and took a small plastic spade and went back to
the area where she found the car. Here she dug at the soil which was quite
hard, after a few tries, she could not do it so paused and looked around her.
She went over to the shed area and found a bigger garden spade and took it back
to the soil. She then dug slightly, she tried again but this time using her
foot to push in the spade. As a hole appeared, Gassy then used her hands to dig
up more dirt. Another child approached and they squealed with laughter and
continued digging up the dirt until Gassy found a large stone. She went over
and found a container and brought it back and placed the toy car and stone in
it. “This is our treasure” she says. The children continue to dig.
The
observation record clearly makes evident how play and exploration is a
characteristic that is continually present and in action through the
interaction the child has with their environment. The finding of the toy car
prompted Gassy to initiate and explore the digging to find what else may be
hidden. The adult challenged her further in encouraging her and making her
think about how she was going to do so. She used trial and error with the
different digging tools, in the end her hands being the best! What is also
clear is the vital role of the practitioner who challenged the child to take
her ideas forward and try them out. This clearly embedding a love to always try
and have a go!
How effective is your
environment in engaging children through play and exploration?
Use the
following questions as prompts to further explore your provision for play and
exploration.
- Is there sufficient space both indoors and out
for children to play and explore?
- Do children have uninterrupted time to play
and explore?
- Does the learning environment allow the
engagement of all the senses?
- Is the learning environment challenging and
full of creative and innovative opportunities?
- How are resources or equipment actually used
by children? And how can these be built on?
- Are resources open-ended so that they can be
used, moved and combined in a variety of ways?
- Do resources reflect children’s interests?
- Can children make choices and decisions?
- Are children’s ideas and imagination
developed?
- Are children given opportunities to test their
ideas, themselves, their relationships and materials?
- Are children’s concepts, skills, attitudes and
achievements extended through play and exploration?
- Can children follow an interest or line of
enquiry? (As in Gassy’s observation)
How can you observe the
CoEL – playing and exploring in action
Use the
following questions to identify this CoEL within your observations, but also to
learn from them to further enhance your provision.
Finding
out and exploring
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What
areas/activities is the child drawn to?
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Do they
prefer to work in a group/alone?
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Do they
initiate activities/experiences themselves or join in existing ones?
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Do they
think aloud describing what they do?
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How do
they use resources?
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Using
what they know in their play
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In play
do they draw on experiences from home/outside the setting
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Do they
act out situations in the role play/home area?
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Are
they confident in finding tools, materials and resources they need for their
ideas?
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Being
willing to have a go
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Levels
of persistence – do they give up at first hurdle or keep trying?
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Are
they eager to try new ideas or do they stay with what they are familiar with?
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Are
they able to talk about/review what they have done? Even if it has not
worked?
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Do they
work best with continual support or prefer to get on with activities
themselves?
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