Day 7
Please read the following article and then write a summary of min. 250 words in the comment box.
See you tomorrow!
Sabina x
If you want your kid to get a good job, let them play!
Fears
about automation displacing workers around the world ranked high on the list of
Things to Be Very Worried About at the World Economic Forum in January. “At the end of the day, we have to fire a lot
of people,” said Ursula Burns, chairman of the supervisory board at telecom group VEON, and
former CEO of Xerox.
Most
of the remedies on offer were the usual high-level suggestions: re-train
workers, offer some kind of universal basic income, design a “new social
contract” that requires companies to factor in the needs of workers along with
maximizing shareholder value. But one group of CEOs looked a little further
down the supply chain, offering a scientifically grounded but under-appreciated
solution to the problem: play.
Helping
kids play more “will equip them to be relevant to the workplace and to
society,” said John Goodwin, CEO of the Lego Foundation and the former chief
financial officer for The Lego Group. That may sound self-serving coming from a
Lego executive. But research shows that play is crucial in establishing the
foundations of social, emotional, and academic learning. Dressing up like Batman or building imaginary cities with blocks help young children cultivate creativity, develop emotional intelligence and regulation, and build empathy—the very skills that robots can’t replace.
At
Davos, this notion was popular even among those who don’t build toys for a
living. Kai Fu Lee, a Taiwanese venture capitalist who opened Google’s China
office and who has worked in artificial intelligence (AI) for more than three
decades, said we need to develop the skills that are unique to
humans. “There are four things AI cannot do as well as humans: creativity,
dexterity, compassion, and complexity.” Empathy, he said, would be paramount.
“We have a human responsibility to do this.”
“Play
is a primary, indeed a primal, way that we learn to understand and experience
the world around us.” Laying the foundations for imaginative problem-solving starts
early, said Goodwin, who was joined by two other play enthusiasts: Jesper
Brodin, CEO of IKEA, and Paul Polman, the CEO of Unilever, who blew off dinner
with US president Donald Trump in order to kick off the Real Play Coalition.
The group will focus on governments, schools and parents, all of whom seem to
undervalue play. They used the World Economic Forum to raise the issue among
those who might need to hear it most: industry and government leaders focused
on the future of the global economy.
The science of play
According
to experts who study such things, play has a technical definition with
certain criteria that must be met. Kenneth Rubin, a professor human development at the University
of Maryland, and his colleagues, say play should be “intrinsically motivated,”
rather than imposed by parents; pleasurable; actively engaging; and operate
outside of life’s many rules. (Naptime be damned, we are flying to Mars on a
purple unicorn!)
Researchers
have identified various categories of play—physical, constructive, imaginative,
dramatic, and games with rules—all of which help children develop in three
domains: physically, socially and emotionally and cognitively:
·
Imaginative play, such as drawing,
dancing, or playing with water, lays the foundations for creativity, allowing
kids to express feelings, communicate, and experiment with reality.
·
Building with blocks or cardboard develops fine motor
skills. It also helps kids to develop resilience, or grit (those block towers
do fall down) and start reasoning and problem-solving (“How do I build a tower
that does not fall down?”).
·
Chasing, hiding, jumping
and wrestling build gross motor skills, the basis for which will be used
to crawl and walk and run, not to mention persevere and think (exercise helps
with memory consolidation).
·
Dramatic play (such as dressing
up, role
play, puppets, and storytelling) helps children with emotional
regulation and critical relationship skills, including empathy, cooperation,
and negotiation.
“Play
is a primary, indeed a primal, way that we learn to understand and experience the
world around us,” writes educator and creativity guru. Ken Robinson in the introduction to “Real Play Every Day: An
Urgent Call to Action,” a white paper on the science of play funded by
Unilever. (Unilever, it should be noted, has an incentive for wanting kids to
get dirty: It runs one of the world’s largest laundry detergent businesses).
“The
simple act of free, self-initiated play helps unlock a child’s innate creativity,
imagination, interests and talents,” Robinson writes. “It helps children to uncover who they are, and
imparts invaluable skills they will need to possess in the uncertain future
they will face tomorrow.”
Play
on the wane
We
know that play is integral to helping children develop into healthy,
well-adapted people. Yet play is an “endangered species,” Goodwin said in Davos
to a rapt group of besuited industry executives, who were seated on small block
chairs and building Legos. According to research commissioned by Edelman
Intelligence, 56% of respondents in a survey of 12,710 parents in 10 countries
said their kids spent less than an hour every day playing outside—less time
than prisoners in a maximum security prison spend outdoors. One in 10 kids
never play outside, and two-thirds of parents say their kids play less than
they did. (Quartz has requested the research from Edelman, and will update when
we hear back.)
What
are kids doing if they’re not playing? Smartphones, video games, and tablets
play a role. But so does over-scheduling kids in organized activities like
soccer, violin lessons, and dance, which do not fit the definition of play.
Parents know kids need academics, sports, and music to “succeed,” so they focus
on those activities, relegating play to a trivial pastime that can be
sacrificed. Yet pushing kids to spend more time studying has not translated to
more engagement in schools. Gallup data shows that about 26% of fifth-graders had a low level of
engagement in school; by 12th grade, that figure had reached 68%.
“There
is a narrow focus on high-stakes, single-result tests which prevents kids from
employing their creative juices,” Goodwin said.
There’s
no doubt that kids need to learn math and science. But they also need to learn
how to be human. “We’re trying to train our kids to be better computers, but
our kids will never be better computers than computers,” Kathy Hirsh-Pasek, a
professor of psychology at Temple University and a leading expert on play,
told the New York Times. Too often, we underestimate the importance of activities that
help kids learn to negotiate with others, explore the world, or invent new
ideas. “These are things humans do better than computers, and play helps us
develop that.”
Peter
Gray, a professor of psychology at Boston University, argues that modern
parenting, with its emphasis on organized activities and academics over
unstructured, free play, is probably the root of the spike in mental-health
problems among kids today.
Kids don’t learn critical life-coping skills because they never get to play, he
argues: “Children today are less free than they have ever been.” And that lack
of freedom has exacted a dramatic toll.
What to
do?
Goodwin
said the primary purpose of the Real Play Coalition is to elevate the
importance of play, so that it’s not just a cause championed by a small group
of CEOs at Davos, but an activity that governments and parents embrace and
fight for. That starts at birth and extends to schools.
“We
are not adapting our education systems for human learning, and that’s where we
have to make an intervention with urgency,” he said.
As
kids enter preschool and formal schooling, the debate around the right balance
of academics and play is fiery. Some argue that taking academics out of early education is
fine for rich kids, who have ample enrichment at home, but can hurt poorer kids
who start school almost a year behind their wealthier peers. However, many
agree that there are ways to make all early learning more playful—including how
we think of math in preschool.
The
potential for workers to be displaced by automated technology is real, and the
angst associated with joblessness—and loss of identity—could lead to social
unrest, warned Alibaba’s Jack Ma. “Each technology revolution has made the world unbalanced,” he
said at Davos. To shield future generations from such a fate, we need to let
them get out the blocks and start building.
Corrections
Many of the workers are concerned about automation, as it causes work-related casualties. Although resources are offered to help workers, it is not enough.
ReplyDeleteBut a group of executive directors offered a solution: the game.
Children must be helped to play more, as they will be prepared to be relevant in work and in society, and it is a primary way in which we learn to understand the world.
Research shows that play is fundamental to establishing social, emotional and academic learning and that it helps children to cultivate creativity, develop emotional intelligence and regulation. And the development of empathy, which robots can not do.
Everyone agreed with this, because we must develop exclusive human skills, and there are things like creativity, dexterity, compassion and complexity that artificial intelligence cannot do. And where empathy plays a very important role, since we have the human responsibility to have it.
Experts say that the game has criteria that must be met and that it has to be motivating, it cannot be imposed by anyone.
The researchers divide the games: physical, constructive, imaginative, dramatic and games with rules, all of which helps the children to develop.
Playing on your own initiative helps unlock the innate creativity, imagination, interests and talents of a child.
Every time children play less outside the home, now they play with smartphones, video games and tablets. And extracurricular activities are not focused on the game either.
Children need to learn maths and science, but they also need to learn to be human, because it seems we train them to be machines.
We underestimate the importance of activities that help children learn to negotiate with others, to explore the world or to invent new ideas.
Children do not learn skills to cope with life because they never get to play, today's children are less free than ever. Many people agree that there are ways to make all learning more playful.
That workers can be displaced by technology and anguish with unemployment and loss of identity could lead to social upheaval. To protect future generations from that fate, we must allow them to get out of the blocks and start building.
Hello again!
ReplyDeletePlease see your corrected summary above, at the end of the post.
Not bad! However, I would have liked you to use more of your own wording rather than that of the article. Something to keep in mind for next time ;)
Sabina x