Loose Things and Play

d91eeecb01866513988fd0969251ee13

I have always noticed when my kids have a novel nondescript object (stick, box)  to play with it tends to capture  their imaginative states for longer periods of time. Living by the beach both my kids seem to find driftwood, shells, sticks and existing sand castle, holes, and sand mounds to play in and around for hours on end. This is what perked my interest in the idea of what I would later find to be labeled as the “Theory of loose parts”.

Read this Article First- the-theory-of-loose-parts

Then this more serious article by Ruth Wilson, Ph.D.

Why Children Play Under the Bushes

The theory of “loose parts” first proposed by architect Simon Nicholson in the 1970’s has begun to influence child-play experts and the people who design playspaces for children in a big way. Nicholson believed that it is the ‘loose parts’ in our environment that will empower our creativity.

loose-parts

Blogs reviewing the power and scope of Loose Parts.

THE THEORY OF LOOSE PARTS

Loose Parts Outside for Adventurous Play!

10 Reasons to Love Loose Parts

Loose parts storage for playgrounds

theory of loose parts

THE THEORY OF LOOSE PARTS: THE RIGHT TO BE CREATIVE

 

homemade-playdough-recipe-and-play

Resource materials/ readings

loose-parts-manualloose-parts-by-schemaloose-parts-manual

loose-parts-by-schema

Book- Loose Parts: Inspiring Play in Young Children

Article- Children’s Outdoor Play & Learning Environments: Returning to Nature

7b1261ffe8c268533d10f8b84a38c718

 

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s