“When I was in elementary school, in the 1950s, we had six-hour school days: two hours of outdoors playing per day, half hour in the morning, half hour during lunch, and a full hour in the afternoon. Including going off-campus! It’s such a different world [now], and so recess has been eroded over time.”

“Because kids are not growing up playing outdoors on their own, they haven’t learned how to solve their own problems.”

Gray has studied the link between a sharp rise in mental disorders and the decline of free play over the last 50 years. Even while he finds free play -- in which children make up their own games and rules without input from adults -- the most important for children, he admits that recess isn’t the ideal situation for many children to play freely.

The ideal play situation is in the neighborhood, where age-mixed children learn from one another in an environment that Gray calls “nurturing.” Recess, however, is mostly in same-age groups, which can foster cliques, competition, and bullying. And then there’s the time issue: when students don't get much of a break, they don’t have time to settle disputes before they head back to class. “They’ve cut recess in Boston to 15 minutes for elementary students,” Gray said. “What was happening is the kids would get outside, and they didn’t have time to settle any problems. They were still focused on the conflict, and it was a big deal to calm them down.”

While Gray originally thought that organized recess coaching organizations like PlayWorks were a terrible idea, because they restricted children’s freedom, he now thinks differently. “Because kids are not growing up playing outdoors on their own, they haven’t learned how to solve their own problems,” he said. “So now [with PlayWorks] they have fresh, young adults who are sort of play coaches, get them started in a game, but then back off. With such limited time it isn’t a bad idea, these young people are pretty good at interacting with kids but not taking over.” He sighed. “How terribly sad that we need a program like this.”

OTHER OBSTACLES

School principals know that elementary children need more recess, but between state academic requirements and staffing the playground, their hands are tied. Jerry Burkett, Director for College and Career Readiness (and former principal) for Grand Prairie ISD in Grand Prairie, Texas, said that, while he was principal, his students made it outside 150-160 days per year, because they have weather restrictions for both summer and winter. And while he feels that recess is “essential” for learning and wished his students got an hour a day instead of 20 minutes, there were too many obstacles in the way to make it happen.

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“Staffing is the largest obstacle to recess, as the students must be actively monitored all the time,” he said. Scheduling became difficult because staff was needed at both lunch and recess, and they often came up short-handed. In addition, free play easily turned to problems. “Recess is often the time where discipline problems spike if there is not a structured lesson, defined rules, or active monitoring of the students. Social problems are rampant on the playground, which enhances the need for more adults to monitor the students.”

“The biggest need in school these days, in my opinion, is to relax the scheduling.”

Yet learning to handle social and emotional problems is where lots of learning takes place, says third- and fourth-grade teacher Jaclyn Karabinas of Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Her wish for recess would be that schedules could be more flexible, so there wouldn’t be a rush back to instruction if time was needed to settle a dispute. As kids are building social skills, bumps in the road will occur, and teachers and staff have to be prepared to deal with emotions and feelings as kids argue over rules and fairness.

“The biggest need in school these days, in my opinion, is to relax the scheduling,” she said. “It would allow more gentle transitions between work and play, and allows each of those experiences to flourish. Time for communication will always be a struggle in schools, and certainly is hard when students need 15 minutes to debrief what happened at recess, which is really important to improve social skills. Yet you have lost academic instructional time -- again.”

TAKING SCHOOL OUTDOORS

Many American school districts will struggle this fall to get any amount of outdoor playtime, especially under time constraints and heavy budget cuts. Chicago Public School mom Vassiliki Kakavas said that her kids will only get recess this year if enough parents volunteer to supervise. But in Canada, they are taking a different approach to recess: a push to get more kids playing outside has resulted in the creation of nature kindergartens and outdoor schools in cities and suburbs alike, mixing the idea of academics and play in an outdoor setting.

One Toronto school created an outdoor classroom for their kindergarten students, where they spent at least 75 minutes per day playing in sand, mud, snow, water and grass - no matter the weather. Even though no official data is yet available, teachers are reporting that students are more engaged, and their attention spans have increased both outside and inside, where they were eager to talk and write about their experiences outside. Students with autism and special needs have taken to the outdoor classroom the most, showing great improvement in their academic and social skills. The outdoor classroom extends beyond recess, and into learning - a combination that could only be beneficial for the bodies and minds of growing students.