Children's Pastimes and Play
in Sixteen Nations
Is Free-Play Declining?
by Dorothy G. Singer, Jerome L. Singer,
Heidi D'Agostino, and Raeka DeLong
[Article Abstract]
This article is based on a study of the role of play and experiential-learning activities
beyond formal schooling in sixteen nations. The study, supported by Unilever
PLC, gathered information from the mothers of twenty-four hundred children
in countries in North America, South America, Africa, Europe, and Asia who
described and rated their children's daily activities in telephone interviews or faceto-
face conversations. They answered questions about their beliefs and attitudes
concerning experiential learning, about their worries for the safety and health of
their children, and about the general values of their children's various pastimes,
including the use of electronic media. The study concerned children of comparable
socioeconomic status in each country and looked at equal numbers of boys and
girls and an equal distribution of children's ages ranging from one to twelve. The
study's findings indicate surprising similarities of children's play in all nations. The
mothers interviewed agreed, for example, that a lack of free-play and experientiallearning
opportunities was eroding childhood. The study indicates that children's
major free-time activity is watching television. In analyzing the data collected in
the study, the authors discuss detailed cross-national comparisons and differences
in play activities by degrees of industrial development. |