Ep 44 - Democratic Play! episode artwork

EPISODE · Oct 19, 2019 · 41 MIN

Ep 44 - Democratic Play!

from The Forest School Podcast · host Lewis Ames and Wem Southerden

Gemma dashes in straight from the woods—muddy boots, leaf-tangled hair—and Lewis hits record for a rapid-fire chat on how democratic play actually works in real life 🌱. Kicking off with Peter Gray’s latest Psychology Today essays, they unpack why true democracy boils down to “freedom + responsibility” and why unstructured, child-led play is the only arena that consistently teaches it. From there they wrestle with messy realities: power-imbalanced games, mixed-age clashes and the fine line between helpful facilitation and adult dictatorship 👀.The duo contrast Gray’s ideals with Vivian Gussin Paley’s rule-changing manifesto You Can’t Say You Can’t Play, where one kindergarten class bans exclusion altogether. Does forced inclusion stifle imaginative flow—or give perpetual outsiders a lifeline? Gemma recalls war-play stand-offs in her own childhood, while Lewis ponders risk-bias: educators often panic faster over name-calling than a one-metre fall off a log.Hunter-gatherer research, playground football hierarchies and the ethics of integrating children with diverse developmental needs all surface as they explore how “the game is keeping the game going.” They finish by teasing future deep-dives (hello, book club!) and reminding listeners to share thoughts inside the Forest School Podcast Community group.Key Topics & Timestamps00:07 – 02:50 Bare-foot dash & tonight’s theme intro02:50 – 07:45 Peter Gray: play as democracy (freedom + responsibility)07:45 – 11:45 When inclusive ideals meet steam-roller play11:45 – 16:00 School rules vs real equality; kind dictators 🤨16:00 – 20:45 Mixed-age dynamics & “least-able has right-of-way” analogy20:45 – 25:05 Gemma’s childhood “play-war” & emotional vs physical risk25:05 – 30:45 📚 Vivian Gussin Paley’s You Can’t Say You Can’t Play—who’s sadder?30:45 – 33:30 Integrating differing abilities without killing the fun33:30 – 36:15 Why modelling matters (& maybe needs a book!)36:15 – 37:50 Next steps: book-review episode, share your stories37:50 – 41:30 Upcoming CPD: storytelling, outdoor cooking, whittling + April Level 3Links & ResourcesPeter Gray articles – Psychology TodayVivian Gussin Paley – You Can’t Say You Can’t PlayJoin the chat → Facebook: Forest School Podcast CommunityTraining dates → https://theforestschoolpodcast.com/trainingWhich side of the “You can’t say…” debate are you on—and how do you handle persistent playground exclusion? Drop your thoughts in the community group!

Gemma dashes in straight from the woods—muddy boots, leaf-tangled hair—and Lewis hits record for a rapid-fire chat on how democratic play actually works in real life 🌱. Kicking off with Peter Gray’s latest Psychology Today essays, they unpack why true democracy boils down to “freedom + responsibility” and why unstructured, child-led play is the only arena that consistently teaches it. From there they wrestle with messy realities: power-imbalanced games, mixed-age clashes and the fine line between helpful facilitation and adult dictatorship 👀.The duo contrast Gray’s ideals with Vivian Gussin Paley’s rule-changing manifesto You Can’t Say You Can’t Play, where one kindergarten class bans exclusion altogether. Does forced inclusion stifle imaginative flow—or give perpetual outsiders a lifeline? Gemma recalls war-play stand-offs in her own childhood, while Lewis ponders risk-bias: educators often panic faster over name-calling than a one-metre fall off a log.Hunter-gatherer research, playground football hierarchies and the ethics of integrating children with diverse developmental needs all surface as they explore how “the game is keeping the game going.” They finish by teasing future deep-dives (hello, book club!) and reminding listeners to share thoughts inside the Forest School Podcast Community group.Key Topics & Timestamps00:07 – 02:50 Bare-foot dash & tonight’s theme intro02:50 – 07:45 Peter Gray: play as democracy (freedom + responsibility)07:45 – 11:45 When inclusive ideals meet steam-roller play11:45 – 16:00 School rules vs real equality; kind dictators 🤨16:00 – 20:45 Mixed-age dynamics & “least-able has right-of-way” analogy20:45 – 25:05 Gemma’s childhood “play-war” & emotional vs physical risk25:05 – 30:45 📚 Vivian Gussin Paley’s You Can’t Say You Can’t Play—who’s sadder?30:45 – 33:30 Integrating differing abilities without killing the fun33:30 – 36:15 Why modelling matters (& maybe needs a book!)36:15 – 37:50 Next steps: book-review episode, share your stories37:50 – 41:30 Upcoming CPD: storytelling, outdoor cooking, whittling + April Level 3Links & ResourcesPeter Gray articles – Psychology TodayVivian Gussin Paley – You Can’t Say You Can’t PlayJoin the chat → Facebook: Forest School Podcast CommunityTraining dates → https://theforestschoolpodcast.com/trainingWhich side of the “You can’t say…” debate are you on—and how do you handle persistent playground exclusion? Drop your thoughts in the community group!

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Ep 44 - Democratic Play!

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This episode is 41 minutes long.

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This episode was published on October 19, 2019.

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Gemma dashes in straight from the woods—muddy boots, leaf-tangled hair—and Lewis hits record for a rapid-fire chat on how democratic play actually works in real life 🌱. Kicking off with Peter Gray’s latest Psychology Today essays, they unpack why...

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