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Childhood's Domain: Play and Place in Child Development [Pehme köide]

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Teised raamatud teemal:

Where do children go and what do they do outdoors? How do they evaluate their own environment? What are their likes and dislikes? What would they like to see added or changed? How can the outdoor environment support healthy child development? How is the impact of the environment affected by its social and physical characteristics? How can its developmental impact be strengthened through public policy?

These are some of the questions addressed by Childhood’s Domain, originally published in 1986, in which children, as ‘expert’ research collaborators, describe their largely unseen life outdoors. On field trips to secret play places around their homes, in streets, in parks, and in places laid waste and abandoned by adult society, they reveal both the pleasure and difficulties of play in the city. A central concept of the book is a new term, terra ludens, which represents the accumulated developmental support that each child receives from her or his personal play spaces. Terra ludens reflects the degree to which each child acquires an intuitive sense of how the world is by playing with it.

Field research for the book was conducted in London, Stevenage New Town and Stoke-on-Trent. Neighbourhood sites were deliberately chosen to contrast and compare children’s reactions to the characteristics of ‘big city’, ‘new town’ and ‘old industrial city’ environments. The most interesting experiences were encountered with children in Stoke-on-Trent. Here, in former mineral workings functioning as ‘playgrounds’ equipped with relics from the heyday of the industrial revolution, in new open spaces reclaimed from industrial ‘wastelands’, and in older parks dating from Victorian times, children demonstrated the creative possibilities of a landscape of opportunities lacking in the other two sites. Even so, children in all three sites revealed great ingenuity in making do with whatever resources they could find to create viable play environments for themselves.

List of figures
Acknowledgements
Introduction
I Playing, learning and place
1 Questions of quality
12(112)
An ecological approach
Development and environment
Environmental competence
People
Differentiation of space and time
Remembrance
Politics of childhood and place
Environmental education
2 Investigation
124(32)
Methodology
Outdoors versus indoors
Territorial form
A woven metaphor
Favourite places
Missing items
Favourite activities
Adventure play
Policy directions
II Exploring childhood territories
3 The flowing terrain
156(26)
Wandering
Pedestrian networks
Bicycles
Other ways of travelling
Getting through
Playing along the way-Topography
Hide-and-seekness
Harvesting found objects
A reminder
4 Habitats around the home
182(926)
Home as haven
Transitional niches
Sheds and garages
Places for pets
Yards and gardens
`Backs,' mews and alleys
Old town `fronts'
New town `fronts'
Car spaces
Streets as playgrounds
5 Parks and playgrounds
1108(30)
Playgrounds in parks
Parks as playgrounds
Parks as Scarce resource areas
Child-adult relations in parks
Hallowed ground?
Adventure playgrounds
6 Greens
1138(22)
School grounds
Bedwell's fields
The Dip
The Banks
School grounds again
Greenway edges
Sports fields
The Little Park
Essential ingredients
7 Rough ground and abandoned places
1160(34)
The Grogs
Guy Fawkes
A `meanwhile' sanctuary
Marat Farm
Woods
Fields
Tracy's marlhole
Glenn's marlhole
Heather's old garage
Lawrence's camps
The "studio"
Haunted house
Chris's camp
The Brickers
Building sites
III Conserving and creating childhood domains
8 Hidden dimensions
1194(24)
Personality
Milieu
Television
Neighbours nice and nasty
Boundaries
Parental fears
Negotiating territorial limits
Mothers and fathers
Special trips
Weekend visits
Public transport
Travelling companions
9 Environmental change
218(16)
Existing conditions
What children wanted changed
In whose interests?
Toponymy
Backlash
Evoking a sense of history
Purity and disorder
The scope of education
10 Policy directions
234(20)
Access to diversity
Adaptation to children's rights
Making streets livable
Conservation of special childhood places
Ftoughing-up urban parks and greens
Urban wildlife management
Adventure playgrounds
Community animation
Participation
Notes and references
254(14)
Appendices
A Notes on method
268(5)
B Tables for children's drawings
273(4)
C Tables for children's interviews
277(9)
D Play objects and places
286(2)
E Organizations working on behalf of children's play, environmental education and children's rights
288(6)
Index 294
Robin C. Moore