Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House

In the United States, children are often given the opportunity to engage in pretend activities; many believe this kind of play benefits children’s development. Recent research has shown, though, that when children ages 4 to 6 are given a choice to do the pretend or the real version of 9 different ac...

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Main Authors: Jessica Taggart, Eren Fukuda, Angeline Stoll Lillard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Kansas 2018-11-01
Series:Journal of Montessori Research
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ku.edu/jmr/article/view/7586
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spelling doaj-59306edad1cd40b3b627b55f8c583a132020-11-24T21:47:06ZengUniversity of KansasJournal of Montessori Research2378-39232018-11-01421910.17161/jomr.v4i2.75867586Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s HouseJessica Taggart0Eren Fukuda1Angeline Stoll Lillard2University of VirginiaUniversity of VirginiaUniversity of VirginiaIn the United States, children are often given the opportunity to engage in pretend activities; many believe this kind of play benefits children’s development. Recent research has shown, though, that when children ages 4 to 6 are given a choice to do the pretend or the real version of 9 different activities, they would prefer the real one. The reasons children gave for preferring real activities often concerned their appreciation of the functionality; when children did prefer pretend activities, their reasons often cited being afraid of, not allowed to, or unable to do the real activity. Given that children in Montessori classrooms have more experience performing real, functional activities, in this study we asked if this preference for real activities is even stronger among children in Montessori schools. We also asked children to explain their preferences. The data are from 116 3- to 6-year-old children (M = 59.63 months, SD = 12.08 months; 68 female): 62 not in Montessori schools and 54 in Montessori schools. Children explained their preferences for pretendand real versions of 9 different activities. Children in Montessori schools preferred real activities even more than did children in other preschools, but all children explained their choices in similar ways. The implications of these results are discussed with regard to play in preschool classrooms.https://journals.ku.edu/jmr/article/view/7586childrenMontessoripreschoolactivitiespreferencespretendreal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jessica Taggart
Eren Fukuda
Angeline Stoll Lillard
spellingShingle Jessica Taggart
Eren Fukuda
Angeline Stoll Lillard
Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House
Journal of Montessori Research
children
Montessori
preschool
activities
preferences
pretend
real
author_facet Jessica Taggart
Eren Fukuda
Angeline Stoll Lillard
author_sort Jessica Taggart
title Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House
title_short Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House
title_full Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House
title_fullStr Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House
title_full_unstemmed Children’s preference for real activities: Even stronger in the Montessori Children’s House
title_sort children’s preference for real activities: even stronger in the montessori children’s house
publisher University of Kansas
series Journal of Montessori Research
issn 2378-3923
publishDate 2018-11-01
description In the United States, children are often given the opportunity to engage in pretend activities; many believe this kind of play benefits children’s development. Recent research has shown, though, that when children ages 4 to 6 are given a choice to do the pretend or the real version of 9 different activities, they would prefer the real one. The reasons children gave for preferring real activities often concerned their appreciation of the functionality; when children did prefer pretend activities, their reasons often cited being afraid of, not allowed to, or unable to do the real activity. Given that children in Montessori classrooms have more experience performing real, functional activities, in this study we asked if this preference for real activities is even stronger among children in Montessori schools. We also asked children to explain their preferences. The data are from 116 3- to 6-year-old children (M = 59.63 months, SD = 12.08 months; 68 female): 62 not in Montessori schools and 54 in Montessori schools. Children explained their preferences for pretendand real versions of 9 different activities. Children in Montessori schools preferred real activities even more than did children in other preschools, but all children explained their choices in similar ways. The implications of these results are discussed with regard to play in preschool classrooms.
topic children
Montessori
preschool
activities
preferences
pretend
real
url https://journals.ku.edu/jmr/article/view/7586
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