If you want a row in education, start a debate about play-based learning.
Ofsted stepped into that spotlight with its recent report, Strong foundations in the first years of school, arguing that “poorly planned play keeps children busy but does not support their development” because “their hands and bodies are active, but their minds are not”.
Some in early years have worried that this is an attack on play-based learning, and not merely an observation that play in nursery and Reception classes can be low-quality.
That leads us to an interesting question: what do we know about the importance of play in early learning, and how can we evaluate its quality?
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