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Health for Children & Young People

RedBranch is a registered charity that promotes healthy lifestyle choices in Irish children and young people.

 

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Play

Children NEED play - according to the American Academy of Pediatrics, play is essential to development because it contributes to the cognitive, physical, social, and emotional well-being of children and youth. Physically active play can also help prevent a range of serious illnesses. Unstructured play is one of the best ways for children to achieve the World Health Organisation's recommended 60 minutes of physical activity per day. Lack of play opportunities is a huge issue across the whole of Ireland. Children themselves often highlight play and recreation as being crucial issues for them.

Irish children have less opportunities for unstructured play than previous generations. Our children lead increasingly ordered and prearranged lives - physical activity happens as part of formal training sessions - dance, hurling, soccer, rugby "training" - rather than informal kick-abouts, tree climbing, role playing and other child-led activities.

Schools & Play

School playgrounds are often just bare patches of tarmac and grass. Forty percent of Irish National Schools operate a "no-run" policy in the playground, and many schools are unaware of the importance of play. Irish children get the least amount of breaktime in Europe. Many Irish children have to choose between eating lunch or going out to play because of restrictive school rules and short break times. 

Schools receive little help regarding play, even though for many children, school playtime is the only opportunity they get for unstructured play. Any playground worth the name needs to be an inspiring place...equipment like skipping ropes and balls may be needed, and adults should model good play behaviour rather than just act as supervisors. At home, parents are often "too busy" to play with their children. Parental concern, while sometimes justified, may lead us to be over-protective.

Children need and want the freedom of real play rather than virtual entertainment and passive TV time. Over-structured activities should not be used to fill the vacuum when there is no room for play in our childrens' lives.

All work and no play certainly makes for a dull life. Children need real play, and adults need to set the scene so that children can lead their own play activities. If not, we are in danger of losing childhood altogether.

 

 

Children playing under the parachute at St Joseph's Primary School in Lisburn. St Joseph's is part of the PlayBoard "Positive Playgrounds" Programme, which helps staff and pupils to make more effective use of the playground by giving children a bigger say in how their playground is run, and introducing new and exciting ideas for play.

The leading play agency in Northern Ireland, PlayBoard, has called on government to encourage schools to prioritise children’s play. PlayBoard released a ‘Play Manifesto’ in February 2007 to highlight the issue of children's play. You can see more of PlayBoard's work by clicking the links below:

PlayBoard Play Manifesto  (PDF format, 235 KB)

PlayBoard "Giving Priority to Play" (PDF format, 338 KB)

 

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Last modified: June 09, 2010

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