cover image The Power of Play: How Spontaneous, Imaginative
\t\t  Activities Lead to Happier, Healthier
\t\t  Children

The Power of Play: How Spontaneous, Imaginative \t\t Activities Lead to Happier, Healthier \t\t Children

David Elkind, .\t\t . Da Capo, $24 (240pp) ISBN 978-0-7382-1053-7

In this fascinating look at the importance of letting kids be kids, \t\t Elkind argues that "Play is being silenced." According to Elkind, a child \t\t psychologist and author of All Grown Up and No Place to \t\t Go, important, unstructured play is too often replaced in modern \t\t times by organized activities, academics or passive leisure activities such as \t\t watching television and playing video games. Elkind explains how even toys have \t\t changed: "toys once served to socialize children into social roles, vocations, \t\t and academic tool skills. Today, they are more likely to encourage brand \t\t loyalties, fashion consciousness, and group think." Elkind acknowledges that \t\t technology has its place in the classroom, but debunks computer programs \t\t marketed toward babies and preschoolers whose young brains are not yet able to \t\t fully comprehend two-dimensional representations. "Parent peer pressure" is \t\t often to blame, causing parents to engage in "hyperparenting, overprotection, \t\t and overprogramming." Media-spread fears about everything from kidnapping and \t\t molestation to school shootings and SIDS can cause parents to forget that \t\t "children can play safely without adult organization; they have done so as long \t\t as people have been on earth." With clarity and insight, Elkind calls for \t\t society to bring back long recesses, encourage imagination and let children \t\t develop their minds at a natural pace. (Jan.)