[.download]Download the report[.download]
The Raising the Nation Play Commission, a year-long independent inquiry into why play is critical to the wellbeing of children in England, is today (Monday February 24th) publishing its Interim Report, ‘State of Play’. The Commission was launched in June 2024 by its chair, entrepreneur and campaigner Paul Lindley OBE - founder of Ella’s Kitchen, the UK’s biggest baby food business. It is working in partnership with former Children’s Commissioner Baroness Anne Longfield’s Centre for Young Lives think tank.
Today’s Interim Report lays down foundations for a Play Strategy for England to be proposed to the Government in the Commission’s final report in June. It both highlights the significant barriers preventing children in England from playing, including a reduction in school playtime, and proposes solutions to Government to make play an integral part of growing up again.
The report argues a National Play Strategy is more urgent than ever, with around four in ten children living with an unhealthy weight, more than a quarter of children overweight (including obese), one in five children and young people in England struggling with a diagnosable mental health problem, and around one in three children not school ready.
The report warns that while play provides huge benefits to children, including improved memory and problem-solving skills, developing social skills like self-regulation and negotiation, better mental and physical health, and boosting school readiness and learning, millions of children in England are missing out on the opportunity to play.
Among the barriers to play highlighted in the report are the decline in the number of places children can play, less time being spent playing outside and at home, the rise of traffic on streets, the increase in housing developments without spaces to play, and a growing ‘anti-play’ ‘No Ball Games’ culture that sees outdoor play as a nuisance or intimidating.
The report also reveals how, despite the immense benefits of breaktimes to children’s development and learning, play time has been squeezed out of the school day over a 25-year period. It analyses four national surveys carried out in 1995, 2006, 2017, and 2021, shared with the Play Commission, which show the significant decline in average total breaktime in minutes per day in England’s schools between 1995 and 2021.
The report shows how the youngest school children in England lost 23 minutes breaktime a day on average compared to their counterparts in 1995. The average total time dedicated to breaktime in a day fell by 18 minutes over the same period for older primary school children, and by 17 minutes for Key Stage 3 children.
It also shows how breaktimes have fallen most sharply in primary schools in the most deprived parts of England. Schools with a higher proportion of children in receipt of Free School Meals have shorter breaktimes. While state secondary schools have seen a significant fall in breaktime, there has been no discernible decline in the time devoted to play in England’s private schools since 1995.
The report argues that an overbearing national curriculum and highly pressurised accountability system has led many schools and teachers to view breaktimes as nothing more than a loss of valuable teaching time. It also warns that many schools are punitively withholding breaktimes from children for behavioural reasons.
‘State of the Nation’ makes a range of evidence-based recommendations to Government to reverse the loss of play time in schools, including:
“Play should be a crucial part of growing up. It improves development, physical and mental health, social skills, and school readiness.
“Yet our Commission has heard countless examples of how England’s children are missing out on the same play opportunities that their parents and grandparents enjoyed.
“An anti-play, ‘No Ball Games’ culture has emerged. Hundreds of playgrounds have closed, half of all youth centres have gone, school playing fields have been sold. Our streets and public spaces feel less safe, and children are losing hours of play time at school every month.
“We can’t continue to watch as our children become increasingly unhealthy and unhappy.
“Play is a crucial tool for reversing the growing number of children with obesity, mental ill health, and developmental problems. It’s time to get our children playing again.”
“Generations of children are now growing up spending less time playing, less time outside, less time with their friends, and more time inside, glued to phones and social media. Play is being squeezed out of their lives, and the consequences for their mental and physical health, and their development, are dire.
“I welcome the Government’s focus on widening opportunities for children and improving school readiness. This interim report puts forward positive, workable, evidence-based proposals to support those aims, including a cross-Government National Play Strategy for England that would boost those ambitions.”
[.download]Download the report[.download]
ENDS
For further information or interview requests contact Jo Green -jo.green@centreforyounglives.org or 07715105415
[.download]Download the report[.download]
The Raising the Nation Play Commission, a year-long independent inquiry into why play is critical to the wellbeing of children in England, is today (Monday February 24th) publishing its Interim Report, ‘State of Play’. The Commission was launched in June 2024 by its chair, entrepreneur and campaigner Paul Lindley OBE - founder of Ella’s Kitchen, the UK’s biggest baby food business. It is working in partnership with former Children’s Commissioner Baroness Anne Longfield’s Centre for Young Lives think tank.
Today’s Interim Report lays down foundations for a Play Strategy for England to be proposed to the Government in the Commission’s final report in June. It both highlights the significant barriers preventing children in England from playing, including a reduction in school playtime, and proposes solutions to Government to make play an integral part of growing up again.
The report argues a National Play Strategy is more urgent than ever, with around four in ten children living with an unhealthy weight, more than a quarter of children overweight (including obese), one in five children and young people in England struggling with a diagnosable mental health problem, and around one in three children not school ready.
The report warns that while play provides huge benefits to children, including improved memory and problem-solving skills, developing social skills like self-regulation and negotiation, better mental and physical health, and boosting school readiness and learning, millions of children in England are missing out on the opportunity to play.
Among the barriers to play highlighted in the report are the decline in the number of places children can play, less time being spent playing outside and at home, the rise of traffic on streets, the increase in housing developments without spaces to play, and a growing ‘anti-play’ ‘No Ball Games’ culture that sees outdoor play as a nuisance or intimidating.
The report also reveals how, despite the immense benefits of breaktimes to children’s development and learning, play time has been squeezed out of the school day over a 25-year period. It analyses four national surveys carried out in 1995, 2006, 2017, and 2021, shared with the Play Commission, which show the significant decline in average total breaktime in minutes per day in England’s schools between 1995 and 2021.
The report shows how the youngest school children in England lost 23 minutes breaktime a day on average compared to their counterparts in 1995. The average total time dedicated to breaktime in a day fell by 18 minutes over the same period for older primary school children, and by 17 minutes for Key Stage 3 children.
It also shows how breaktimes have fallen most sharply in primary schools in the most deprived parts of England. Schools with a higher proportion of children in receipt of Free School Meals have shorter breaktimes. While state secondary schools have seen a significant fall in breaktime, there has been no discernible decline in the time devoted to play in England’s private schools since 1995.
The report argues that an overbearing national curriculum and highly pressurised accountability system has led many schools and teachers to view breaktimes as nothing more than a loss of valuable teaching time. It also warns that many schools are punitively withholding breaktimes from children for behavioural reasons.
‘State of the Nation’ makes a range of evidence-based recommendations to Government to reverse the loss of play time in schools, including:
“Play should be a crucial part of growing up. It improves development, physical and mental health, social skills, and school readiness.
“Yet our Commission has heard countless examples of how England’s children are missing out on the same play opportunities that their parents and grandparents enjoyed.
“An anti-play, ‘No Ball Games’ culture has emerged. Hundreds of playgrounds have closed, half of all youth centres have gone, school playing fields have been sold. Our streets and public spaces feel less safe, and children are losing hours of play time at school every month.
“We can’t continue to watch as our children become increasingly unhealthy and unhappy.
“Play is a crucial tool for reversing the growing number of children with obesity, mental ill health, and developmental problems. It’s time to get our children playing again.”
“Generations of children are now growing up spending less time playing, less time outside, less time with their friends, and more time inside, glued to phones and social media. Play is being squeezed out of their lives, and the consequences for their mental and physical health, and their development, are dire.
“I welcome the Government’s focus on widening opportunities for children and improving school readiness. This interim report puts forward positive, workable, evidence-based proposals to support those aims, including a cross-Government National Play Strategy for England that would boost those ambitions.”
[.download]Download the report[.download]
ENDS
For further information or interview requests contact Jo Green -jo.green@centreforyounglives.org or 07715105415