ABSTRACT

Ordinary games are an important vehicle for children's learning. They provide a powerful, naturally occurring learning environment that is physical, playful and fun. Playing games requires interpersonal skills in language, thought, social behavior, creativity, self-regulation and skilful use of the body. When children play games together they develop the following key capacities:

•Cooperative behavior
•Focused attention
•Social understanding
•Holding information in mind
•Motor, spatial and sequential planning
•Self-regulation, e.g impulse control, coping with excitement, controlled exertion
•Collaborative behavior and negotiation
•Self-expression and creativity.
Games provide a social experience that is emotionally compelling, where children laugh and have fun and do not realise they are interacting, problem solving, negotiating and cooperating with each other.
Play Better Games is designed to help practitioners and parents to think about what might prohibit their children from joining in with games and plan effective strategies for support. It will be of benefit to teachers, therapists, group works, play workers, midday supervisors and support workers, as well as to parents and siblings of children with autism.

chapter 1|12 pages

Rhythmic games

chapter 2|12 pages

Games of togetherness

chapter 3|12 pages

Looking and finding games

part |2 pages

Self-regulation

chapter 4|12 pages

Games of exertion

chapter 5|12 pages

Games that focus attention

chapter 6|12 pages

Exciting games

part |2 pages

Adapting to others

chapter 7|12 pages

Mutual enjoyment through games

chapter 8|12 pages

Games that avoid conflict

chapter 9|12 pages

Games with rules

part |2 pages

Creativity

chapter 10|12 pages

Games of expression

chapter 11|12 pages

Games with stories

chapter 12|12 pages

Games of pretence