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Children Need Time to Play

2012-09-12 06:11:38ByLisaCarducci
Beijing Review 2012年25期

By Lisa Carducci

Children Need Time to Play

By Lisa Carducci

LI SHIGONG

In the West, tiger mothers and wolf fathers are considered examples of extreme parenting. However, many Chinese parents put pressure on their children and probably look to such tiger mothers and wolf fathers as role models.

When I frst came to China in 1985, it appeared to me that the pressure concerned only high school students who were going to enter universities. But in the following years, the phenomenon gradually encompassed first primary school children, then those of pre-school age, and finally newborn babies and pre-born children.

In the last two decades, the competition to do well in the national higher education entrance examination, or gaokao, has spread to lower levels of school entrance, and even for access to a good kindergarten, children have to pass exams and interviews.

In order to succeed, one or two years before entering kindergarten, they must study English, drawing, calligraphy, singing and dancing, and the three years of kindergarten are mostly spent building up an early lead in primary school performance.

Noting the phenomenon, local educational authorities in cities such as Shanghai and Beijing have prohibited any kindergartens from imposing arbitrary charges for courses such as English and dancing, but such efforts are not so rewarding.

A recent survey by educational authorities in Shanghai shows that although more than 90 percent of kindergartens in the city do not offer related courses, and about three fourths of respondents disagree that their children will be less competitive than others after attending primary school if they do not get enough training in kindergarten, some 61 percent still enroll their children in extra courses at kindergarten schools or elsewhere.

What if parents let their 3- or 4-year-old child enjoy free time on Saturday and Sunday, after five days in nursery? They would be judged to be depriving their offspring of a chance in life. As others do, so must they.

Yet children have not only the right, but the need to play.

Kindergartens, literally children’s gardens, were originally intended to prepare children for primary school, showing them how to hold a pencil and other basic abilities as well as letting them socialize with other children, giving them a chance to play with others, to share, to make concessions, and to deal with misunderstandings and differences in opinion. This is particularly important in China where most children have no brothers and sisters and are used to being “l(fā)ittle emperors” at home.

Kindergartens should not be a school. There should be no classroom, no lesson, no homework, and particularly no exam, which is strictly prohibited by the country’s kindergarten operational guideline. Rather, playtime should be the prime activities for kindergarteners, who have an irrepressible drive to play.

They need to play with others and also play on their own, as play facilitates not only creativity and imagination but also learning in a lively way. Children can discover numbers while playing games and the alphabet through songs. Some Chinese characters can become familiar to them by being used in games.

Although time and again the Chinese authorities have ordered that the amount of homework be reduced for students and encouraged parents to offer their children other educative paths, many parents judge such ideas a waste of time and they soon fll their children’s free time with new competitive learning.

Such an unhealthy balance of work and play has terrible consequences for children’s futures as it stifles their physical activities by making them sit still for long periods and deprives them of the time to socialize, and thus they become introverted and asocial.

The problem is presently at its peak, because many Chinese parents stress academic performance above all. Children work hard while having less and less time to play. What these parents fail to realize is that they are actually following the examples of how not to raise a kid.

The author is a Canadian living in China

liuyunyun@bjreview.com

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