Home Provider General Dramatic Play
Dramatic Play PDF Print E-mail
User Rating: / 3
PoorBest 
Written by Jenny Wanderscheid   

 

Dramatic Play

 

By Vanessa Rasmussen, © 2004, All rights reserved.
Website:
http://www.startingadaycarecenter.com

 

 

Dramatic play is central to children's healthy development and learning during the preschool years. It is one of the central ways children work through the important experiences in their lives. A young child's family and home are the biggest part of his or her world. The imitation of what happens there an in the world around them is the central focus of how children play. Children act out and explore the lives of people by acting out their work, their feelings, and their words.

In early childhood, drama needs no written lines to memorize, structured behavior patterns to imitate, nor is an audience needed. Children need only a safe, interesting environment and freedom to experiment with roles, conflict, and problem solving. Children can switch roles -- from animate to inanimate objects -- with a blink of an eye. Often childhood is all about the ability to be anything we want without a worry in the world. Carefree, creative dramatic play promotes cognitive development and helps children learn how to share, communicate and cooperate with each other. Through role playing children also learn how to develop empathy for others.

The benefits of play for children's intellectual growth are numerous. As children play out the situations in their lives (or in their pretend lives), they are met with situations they do not understand. As they approach the situations and attempt to make sense of them in the context of their own lives, they practice problem-solving skills and build new knowledge. Children grow physically as they rearrange (gross motor) the large elements (table, chairs, cradle, etc) of the interest area and as they manipulate (fine motor) contents (food boxes, dolls, clothes, and hats) of the interest area.

Make sure that you provide non-intrusive supervision of children's free play. While one child may welcome suggestions and comments, another may reject any adult intervention. Be careful not to allow dramatic play to become a "teaching" situation as it will alter the value of the play for the children. The goal is to stimulate play not dominate it.

Prop Boxes may also be used to enhance a theme-based dramatic play centre. Prop boxes might have playthings and some real life items in it which makes it possible for the children to enact a real life situation. For example, a doctor box can have play stethoscope, thermometer, medicines, prescription pads, doctor's coat, telephone, etc.

Books can also provide children with inspiration for their dramatic play as they recreate and alter stories they have heard or read. Promote understanding of books and other texts by including storybooks, phone books, calendars, cookbooks, newspapers, magazines, and other print materials in the Dramatic Play Area. Encourage children to use these props in their play. Encourage children's interest in mathematics by offering props such as play money, scales, measuring tapes, cash registers, and calculators. Expand children's knowledge of life science by including plants in the Dramatic Play Area. Encourage them to be sensible towards the environment by talking about recycling, planting trees and the evils of littering. Talk about various communities, cultures and countries and encourage the children to include related activities in the play.

 

Copyright 2001, 2004. All rights reserved. Any reproduction of this article in whole or in part without written or verbal permission is strictly prohibited. For information about reprinting this article, contact the copyright owner: Vanessa Rasmussen, Ph.D, Starting a Day Care Center, http://www.startingadaycarecenter.com.

kidline

Dear Reader:  You can help us make this section even better!

All of our articles and ideas have come from our imagination and from reader submissions.  Please use this form to contact us if you have content you would like to add to this website. Make sure to add your comments at the bottom of the article!  And don't forget to visit us on our child care forums for friendship, support and learning!

Webmasters and Authors:

We will gladly include a link back to your site or book in exchange for sharing your content.  Just contact us!


(3 Votes)

Trackback(0)

TrackBack URI for this entry

Comments (0)

Subscribe to this comment's feed

Write comment

smaller | bigger
security image
Write the displayed characters

busy Quote this article on your site

To create link towards this article on your website,
copy and paste the text below in your page.




Preview :

Dramatic Play
Monday, 05 January 2009
Dramatic Play By Vanessa Rasmussen, © 2004, All rights reserved. Website: http://www.startingadaycarecenter.com ...

Powered by QuoteThis © 2008
Last Updated on Monday, 05 January 2009 14:55
 

Featured Holiday



One of our favorite holidays is Easter.  We love the religious and non-religious alike.  There is much joy to be had in spring and no matter how you celebrate, we are sure that you can find something for everyone in our Easter section. Click here to get started.

Upcoming Holidays


If you like to plan ahead, this is the section for you!
We've got year round fun on tap every day of the year!
Independence Day
Grandparents Day
Columbus Day
Halloween
Thanksgiving
 

Share This Page!









Click here to Shop Scentsy





Your Opinion

Do your children get an allowance?
 

Subscribe to ChildFun

Subscribe now to get updated when we add new articles, activities, crafts, stories, fingerplays, parenting advice and more. You will be updated each time we add a new article to ChildFun. (This replaces our previous newsletters.)
Click here to subscribe!
subscribe

What's New at ChildFun

↑ Grab this Headline Animator



Search Wikipedia

Like it? Share it!


© Copyright 1996 - 2010
ChildFun is a trademark of ChildFun, Inc.
All Graphics on this site are copyright protected
© ChildFun, Inc. and © Original Country Clipart
ChildFun, Inc., PO Box 1173, Mankato, MN 56002
Voice/Fax: 507.625.1124