Resources

Bring Play To Your City

GO

Recent News

Forbes Magazine
New York Times

School Recess and Group Classroom Behavior

Children in urban, low-income schools are less likely to have recess than students in other schools. Teachers cite improved behavior in the classroom when students have recess.

Assessing Recess

Growing Concerns about Shrinking Playtime in Schools

Over three-quarters of Americans believe that children aren’t getting enough physical playtime on a daily basis, and 91 percent agree that recess helps children stay focused and learn in the classroom.

Does Your Child’s Recess Make the Grade?

in

Recess is the time for kids to get healthy play so they can go back to class focused and ready to learn. But as any parent knows, managing large groups of kids can be challenging. At recess, disciplinary problems can interrupt the school day.

There are ways your school can get the most out of recess while reducing disciplinary problems. Find out how your child’s recess grades, then talk to your school about these ways to make recess count:

Play Matters

A Study of Best Practices to Inform Local Policy and Process in Support of Children’s Play

In municipalities across America, engaged citizens and civic leaders are actively seeking innovative ways to improve the accessibility, quality, and quantity of play and play spaces for children. To help cities build awareness and develop a policy on play, KaBOOM! identified 12 relevant and innovative best practices in play. Playworks Baltimore is cited as one example.

Read the full Play Matters report.

Revamped Recess Puts Focus on the Physical

They would ignore the brightly colored balls left for them on the playground and the hopscotch lines painted on the pavement. Instead, in past years many students at Conservatory Lab Charter School, in Brighton, would spend the half-hour recess sitting idly beneath a leafy tree, chatting away.

Not anymore.

Does Recess Before Lunch Make Sense for Your School?

Elementary schools across the country have implemented a new lunch schedule where recess comes before lunch. These schools have seen many benefits of the new lunch schedule, including a reduction in lunch waste, increased healthy food consumption and reduced behavioral problems in the classroom directly after recess. 

Six Tips for Making Recess More Fun

in

Here are six tips to help any grown-up make recess safe, healthy and a lot more fun. Feel free to share these with other parents and staff members at your child's school.

5 Ways to Get More Play Into Your Child’s Day

in

Stuart Brown says play makes kids happier, healthier, and better students, but how can parents make that happen in a stressed-out, overscheduled world?

Crisis in the Kindergarten

Why Children Need to Play in School

Kindergarteners are under intense pressure to meet testing standards while also being denied play time, leading to a rise in aggression and behavioral problems.