Places for Child-Managed Bodily Play at an After-School Program

  • Knut Løndal
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Abstract

This article investigates how children play at different places in an outdoor area, and how those places influence child-managed bodily play. The study has a life-world approach, and the theoretical perspective is based on an interactional understanding of place. Qualitative material was gathered from interviews among children in a Norwegian after-school program and from close observations of their activities in the Climbing Area, at the Asphalt Place, and in the Sandpit. The findings show that bodily play that includes locomotory, stabilizing, and manipulative movements occurs in a relational process between the affordances of the place and the abilities of the children. Initially, the Climbing Area offers opportunities for diverse bodily activities. At the Asphalt Place and in the Sandpit, it is the combination of the physical characteristics of and the equipment available at each place that stand out as affordances. Additionally, sociocultural factors play an important role in how the children play at the various places. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

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APA

Knut Løndal. (2013). Places for Child-Managed Bodily Play at an After-School Program. Children, Youth and Environments, 23(2), 103. https://doi.org/10.7721/chilyoutenvi.23.2.0103

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