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Let me clue you in on a
little secret: the ancient Greek words
for education/culture (paideia), play
(paidia), and children (paides) all
have the same root. I say "secret"
because, if yours truly has spent the
past thirty years trying to unite the
above terms within the four walls of a
school and yet only just uncovered
this source of my life's work, then I
figure I must have company.
I stumbled upon the above etymological
gem while researching the philosophy
of Plato for a new book. In the
process I learned that the evidence
for a classical link between education
and play is considerable. For
instance, L. Brandwood in A Word Index
to Plato lists over sixty citations in
the Republic alone to paideia, paidia,
and paides.
Then consider the following
conversation in the Republic between
Socrates and Plato's brother Glaucon:
"Well then," Socrates begins, "the
study of calculation and geometry, and
all the preparatory education required
for dialectic must be put before them
as children and the instruction must
not be given the aspect of a
compulsion to learn."
"Why not?" asks Glaucon.
"Because the free man ought not to
learn any study slavishly. Forced
labors performed by the body don't
make the body any worse, but no forced
study abides in the soul."
"True."
"Therefore, you best of men, don't use
force in training the children in the
subjects, but rather play. In that way
can you better discern toward what
each is naturally directed."
Mind you I am no devotee of Plato. He
and I part company on many an issue.
His ponderings on justice, morality
and government, however, have had a
profound and lasting influence on
Western thinking. So what happened to
the notion that learning should be
firmly rooted in play? And how is it
that you and I were never told about
it?
The answer, hopefully, will fill up a
book. Suffice it to say for now that
the educational model the West holds
so dearly was a repressive one right
from the start, beginning with the
Victorian men who dreamed it up. They
considered play to be learning's very
antithesis. Or as Jane Fonda was fond
of saying in her exercise videos, "No
pain, no gain." Pleasure was never
part of the equation.
Which isn't to say that enlightened
ideas don't occasionally slip through
our education system's suppressive
filters. But when they do, they always
meet resistance, sometimes resolute,
sometimes subtle.
Take Friedrich Froebel, for example.
His series of experimental schools for
children based on the belief that
learning should be grounded in play
and natural discovery—that every
school should be a garden of
children—so threatened Prussian
society that it shut them all down.
The United States then borrowed from
Froebel's philosophy, but in a
circumscribed form he never intended:
as an optional year of fun and games
before the real work of education
begins at age six.
Today, thanks to the relentless hype
of the standards-mongers, play is even
disappearing from kindergarten. Old
Plato must be turning over in his
grave.
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