Showing posts with label play. Show all posts
Showing posts with label play. Show all posts

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Library Disciple

A map of Erie and Niagara County

Remember when you were a kid and your parents told you to go "make your own fun"?
I remember looking around the same old neighborhood, kids, dogs and bikes and wondering how I was going to make 'fun'.
That’s when I first learned that fun is different from entertainment.  

Fun is a feeling you get when you’re enjoying something..  Fun happens when you play.  When you play you discover, explore and try new things.
In our neighborhood we explored other people’s yards and found blueberry bushes, we discovered how fast you could ride down the hill with someone on your handlebars (before you crashed into the telephone pole), we built forts in the woods and, on rainy days, we walked to the library.  All pretty good fun.

Rosa Brooks has a hilarious article in the Los Angeles Times called “Please, Go Outside and Play” that reminds people what it was like when we (the gray haired generation) went outside and played ALL DAY, everyday and, somehow survived the perils of our neighborhood.  She pokes fun at modern kids who are overprotected, overscheduled and undercreative.  “We’ve managed to turn childhood into a long,  hard slog” she writes.  

And then, to appease our guilty consciences, we try desperately to entertain our kids so they’ll forget about all the homework, lessons and nagging and, instead, remember the great trip to Disney or the new video game system..

Entertainment is an activity intended to be fun - you don't make it, it happens to you.
As kids we were entertained by Gilligan’s Island, occasional trips to an amusement park and walking downtown for ice cream.

Entertainment is fleeting and ends as quickly as it started.  The curtain comes up, the park closes and the ice cream melts.  When I was a kid my parents were busy working and doing grown up stuff and didn't have the time or the money to overly-entertain us and we didn't expect them to.

We have taught our 21st century kids that fun costs money, requires packing and will entertain them.  That’s why kids don’t describe the library as fun or entertaining.  Instead they use the words boring, lame or stuffy. It’s hard to have fun at the library without an imagination.

Last year a family in Buffalo bucked the trend and decided to go on a library quest.  A road trip to visit all of the 37 branches in Buffalo & Erie County Public Library System.  At each branch the mom and her two daughters (and sometime dad, dog and grandparents) took pictures, had their log book signed and checked out some books. Then they posted their pictures and a description of the library on their blog.  
The blog makes it clear that while they enjoyed all the libraries, they also made some fun in each little community they visited by checking out something new; an ice cream parlor, a nature preserve, a unique shop, a bakery or a local museum.  Nothing crazy, just a little added adventure.

What turns something so simple into fun?  
I think it’s the unknown, not knowing what you might find, how it will look or what it will taste like.

I was impressed by this mom's creativity - she took something ordinary and made her own fun for herself and her kids.
It wasn't a huge project and it didn't cost a lot of money.  The biggest cost was time.  
What could be a better use of the weekend than going to the library with my kid and having some ice cream?
In the process her kids learned how to write a blog.  They learned a little geography, some map skills, library appreciation, and, most importantly,  how to enjoy the simple pleasures that life makes available to us each day.

What are you going to do today to make your own fun?

Monday, June 20, 2011

Library Disciple

Playing is something I’m not very good at anymore.
I’m not sure when it happened, but suddenly I got overwhelmingly serious.
It’s not a good thing.
My fun comes from going to the library and reading (of course), running  marathons, working in the garden or vacuuming my car (it’s still new and shiny).  Not exactly a barrel full of monkeys.

I try to have fun and play when I’m in my classroom, it’s the only way to get through the day.   I crack very corny jokes, talk to myself, dance and act out science and social studies concepts (I perform an excellent water cycle and you should see me as a hatching chick!)

I try to have fun with my daughter too.  Last weekend we decided to clip (shave) our dog and ended up in hysterics on the lawn after seeing our handiwork (our once beautiful Golden Retriever now looks  like a sheep sheered with a weed whacker).  We usually find something to laugh about from our day - does that count as play?

I used to have fun going out to eat, watching t.v., socializing and traveling,  but in my current incarnation I’m stuck in a  fuddy-duddy rut.  Since I am often made aware of this weakness, I was interested in the latest news from the Library Journal about a “Play Symposium”.  The moderator was Liz Dansforth, a LJ Game blogger and Librarian at Pima County Public Library in Tucson, AZ.  The goal of the event was to encourage libraries to take a more playful approach with information and learning.

I was off and running to see what kind of fun they were having in Pima County.  I wasn’t disappointed.  They’re having lots of fun and playing with history, art, film, politics and even books.  Maybe if I lived in Tucson my Buffalo seriousness would thaw and I could have fun again?  If it did, I might hang up my gardening gloves and run down to the library to:

  • Watch “Welcome to Shelbyville” a documentary about contemporary immigration  - I know that doesn’t sound like too much fun but I’m just warming up and maybe they have popcorn?
  • Enjoy the Centenarian Oral History Project in honor of Arizona’s 100th Birthday (Valentine’s Day 2012).  To celebrate they are interviewing 100 year old residents that have spent their lives in Pima County.  Check out the great interview with William McNerney,  a 101 year old resident of Tuscon.
  • But my favorite?  Spring Freecycle - a spring cleaning swap.  This taps into yard sale fun AND it’s free, that’s my idea of a good playdate!  People bring in anything from their house that’s in good shape and swap it for other people’s junk - talk about win-win!  I laughed out loud when I read, “participants are asked not to bring any large items, such as refrigerators or motorcycles.”

Is play really necessary when we get older?
Why not just cut it out of the schedule and get more done?
  • play help us relax and reduce stress, a factor that is critical to our health...maybe checking out all the new books at the library is play, it certainly is relaxing, even if I can’t read them all.
  • play allows us to be creative and express ourselves...that’s why I like playing in the garden and writing this blog everyday.
  • play helps us learn and solve problems, trying too hard to figure everything out rarely works, playing around with ideas and letting them stew on the brain’s back burner can be more effective.
  • play helps us build skills; when we gain competence at a task we feel more confident and have more fun.
  • play helps us connect with others, build relationships and join communities of support. Like the having a playdate with thousands of other runners during a marathon.

So, play doesn’t necessarily mean recreation or entertainment.  To play is to be engaged in a pleasurable, mostly unstructured, activity that allows us to be creative, to experiment, to learn and to connect with others.  

Maybe I’m not doing so bad after all (but I still want to visit Pima County).