HASINA B. EBRAHIM
Transcription
HASINA B. EBRAHIM
HASINA B. EBRAHIM Discipline Leader and Associate Professor for Early Childhood and Foundation Phase Education, Faculty of Education, University of the Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa The role of play in fostering a creative culture: A SOUTH AFRICAN PERSPECTIVE The role of play in fostering a creative culture: A South African perspective Hasina B. Ebrahim Young children in the preschool years in a diverse country like South Africa are exposed to a myriad of rich experiences as childhood is constructed by and for them. As experts in childhood who are making sense of the world around them the opportunities for play helps them to reconstruct knowledge, skills and values they are exposed to in multiple learning environments such as the family, community and preschool. This is important if we take into account that a significant number of children in South Africa construct their childhood in total immersion in the practical day to day activities with adults in their context. The children show ample evidence of playfully converting one thing into another. During these processes they are motivated to solve problems where objects and ideas combine to create new possibilities (Bodrova, Leong & Hensen, 2000; Ebrahim, 2012b). In my research experiences with young children the cognitive processes stimulating creativity was noted as non-literal, fluid and momentary association with ideas and objects, scanning the context to extract information for ideas and action, momentary or prolonged pondering on possibilities, testing out possibilities in different ways, responding and discovering a-ha moments (Ebrahim, 2007, 2011). The affective experiences relate to emotions such as joy, humour, anger, resistance and feeling safe to explore. The spontaneity with which the play episodes are approached promotes high energy and makes time stand still for children. Immersion in emotional and social time rather than clock work time becomes privileged in a free spirited play environment. In their daily lives young children do things that make us think of them as out of the ordinary. Their play through child-initiated efforts enables them to become powerful and take control of the situations they have prioritised for themselves. Power becomes visible as young children utilise their cognitive processes, affective experiences and socio-cultural background knowledge to express themselves in creative ways. Play affords building blocks for creativity to develop in multi-faceted ways. As children grow they would have promising threads to draw on depending on how their creative endeavours are supported by adults. The socio-cultural background of the child influences creative development and expression. In South Africa the ethnic milieu in which the child functions offers tools which find expression through play. In my work with children in multicultural preschool centres that promoted a straight forward English approach the children were able to contradict conformity through using their mother tongue in play (Ebrahim, 2007). They were able to create a newness through verbal gymnastics and langua ge play that suited their purposes (Ebrahim & Francis, 2008). A variety of play types has the potential for creative develop ment.The most influential is imaginative play. This form of play uses fantasy and symbolism to stimulate expressions of creati vity. When imaginative play is encouraged then children engage in many episodes where symbolic behaviour is highlighted. Cultures of Creativities 21 In order to gain currency for the novelty of their ideas the children I studied were able to use persuasive ideas, for example, punishment from God to bring others into their world. It could be argued that the recipients of these ideas are not just conforming to the influencer but being presented with alternate ideas and acts for perspective forming and taking. space. Whilst transgressive behaviour is perceived in negative terms by teachers and parents/primary caregivers, it does create opportunities for a unique response, risk taking, finding new ideas and ways of doings things. Play engendered creativity can grow if adults as socialising agents attend to the meaning young children make in play. Hence, it is important to pay attention to how teachers and parents/primary caregivers might restrict creative develop ment. With regard to play in preschools the possibilities for creative development can be lost if play as a practice initiated by children is separated from learning. This is especially the case when the temporal and spatial environments are organised in a way that sends a clear message that teacher-initiated activities are associated with serious teaching and learning. Free play indoors and outdoors is where children do their own thing. Play also fosters creativity in an ubuntu sense and promotes the idea of umuntu ngumuntu ngabantu (a person is only a person through other people). These African concepts of human solidarity afford opportunities for children to act as a collective to promote or disrupt ideas and/or use objects in meaningful and novel ways. In my work in rural KwaZulu-Natal young children in open-air preschools were afforded opportu nities for play with older children (buddies) (James & Ebrahim, 2012). This kind of support allowed for apprenticeship behaviour and social learning from a grouping other than their peers and adults. Children have opportunities to develop observation skills and skills in participation. When young children play in a group they have opportunities to develop scripts to suit specific aims, become awareness of different perspectives, allocate or be allocated resources and deal with multiple demands. A challenge in South Africa is the schoolification of preschools through a push-down curriculum from schooling. This is the result of a large number of un and under-qualified teachers, a fragmentary curriculum environment and parent pressure for evidence of school learning to give their children a head-start. In this context the compliant child rather than the creative child is valued. It is not uncommon for teachers to limit creative expression only to free play sessions in order to reserve time for the teaching of basic skills. This kind of rigidity promotes passive and conventional behaviour that make low demands on children’s cognitive processes, affective experiences and actualising of prior socio-cultural knowledge. Play does not only encourage creative expression when children initiate their own agendas but also within adult-initiated agendas. Young children are able to distance themselves from mainstream activity through different acts. Creative acts allow them to subvert the official space for learning into a personal Cultures of Creativities 22 The way in which parents and primary caregivers use their religious, social and cultural background to rear children affects the possibilities for creative development and expression. The characteristics of a creative child as being independent thinking, stubborn and persevering runs counter to the image of the respectable and obedient child. For example, in my examination of the approach to early childhood education, teachers in centre-based provision in the Free State noted how Sesotho speaking parents were concerned about an active learning approach which encouraged their children to ask questions (Ebrahim, 2012a). Teachers noted how parents complained about their children being disrespectful and challenging adult authority. This response can be understood when one considers that in the history of South Africa pre school education was never freely available to black communities in which these parents were growing up. Hence this type of education is foreign and threatening. Additionally, in traditional African families it is not uncommon for early education to take place by telling and instructing. Play is largely what children do when adults attend to their own priorities. If play of young children is truly to become the vehicle to nurture creativity in a diverse society like South Africa the way forward would be for adults to become highly aware of the critical role they play. Emergent possibilities for creativity of young children will only flourish if adults around them are sensitive to their needs and interests. This requires a new mindset on how young children are viewed. If they are seen as people getting to know their world in the here and now of childhood and in terms of their future roles then adults could make efforts to learn from them and support them in their meaning making. This is difficult to achieve in communities where group interests might surpass individual interests and where innovation is only reserved for certain aspects of life e.g. in business but not in relationships. Nonetheless, advocacy for enabling relationships which create safety for exploration in a relaxed atmosphere will go some way towards helping young children to experiment and share possibilities. REFERENCES Bodrova, E., Leong, D.J. & Hensen, R. (2000), ‘Imaginative, child-directed play: leading the way in development and learning’, Dimensions of Early Childhood, vol. 4, no. 4, pp. 25-30. Ebrahim, H. (2007), ‘Constructions of childhood for and by children in two early childhood centres in the province of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa: An ethnographic study’, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Unpublished dissertation. Ebrahim, H. (2011), ‘Children as agents in early childhood education’, Education as Change, vol. 15, no. 1, pp. 109-19. Ebrahim, H. (2012a), ‘Tensions in incorporating global childhood into early child hood programmes: The case of South Africa’, Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, vol. 37, no. 3, pp. 80-6. Ebrahim, H. & Francis, D. (2008), ‘You said, ‘Black girl’: doing difference in early childhood’, Africa Education Review, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 274-87. Ebrahim, H.B. (2012b), A qualitative research report on: Developing talents through creative play in the Foundation Phase in four schools in Atteridgeville, University of Free State, Bloemfontein, South Africa. James, M. & Ebrahim, H. (2012), ‘Pedagogic activities for early education in a child to child programme in South Africa’, in Cross-cultural perspectives on early childhood, T. Papatheodorou & J. Moyles (eds), London: Routledge, pp. 89-97. Cultures of Creativities 23