Inclusion through Play
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Cambridge
Department Name: Faculty of Education
Abstract
Inclusion through Play: The role of play-learning in supporting the wellbeing, socioemotional development and learning of adolescents who have been excluded from school.
Exclusion from school is a challenging and disruptive experience that significantly impacts the development of adolescents, often resulting in lost learning. School exclusions have now returned to pre-pandemic levels and suspensions, particularly for students in mid adolescence, are soaring again from last year's record breaking high numbers (DofE 2023). However, a central problem facing the Alternative Provision1 sector is that very little evidence exists for how we might engage and improve trajectories for excluded pupils nor a consensus over what 'success' looks like in AP (Gil et al. 2017). Without a clear road map, currently, not enough is done to mitigate the damage done to a child's development and opportunities following exclusion from school (Gil et al. There is strong evidence that play-learning and integrated pedagogies have a positive impact on attainment, wellbeing and socioemotional development with important application for students with multilayered experiences of vulnerability.
n the context of an adolescent mental health crisis, this thesis directly addresses priorities for future research identified in a recent review (Bone & Fancourt 2022), and responds to an earlier call in LEGO's white paper 'Learning through Play' for more robust research into "the impact of play-learning and integrated pedagogies in secondary [education]" (Zosh et al. 2017), particularly for students with Special Educational Needs in low-income contexts, in areas where the available evidence on holistic education is "generally weak" (Bungay & Vella-Burrows, 2013, p. 44).
1. Alternative provision (AP) is a catch-all term which describes all educational provision outside of mainstream and special needs schools. Some of this provision is state-maintained, which means the government is responsible for this provision.
Exclusion from school is a challenging and disruptive experience that significantly impacts the development of adolescents, often resulting in lost learning. School exclusions have now returned to pre-pandemic levels and suspensions, particularly for students in mid adolescence, are soaring again from last year's record breaking high numbers (DofE 2023). However, a central problem facing the Alternative Provision1 sector is that very little evidence exists for how we might engage and improve trajectories for excluded pupils nor a consensus over what 'success' looks like in AP (Gil et al. 2017). Without a clear road map, currently, not enough is done to mitigate the damage done to a child's development and opportunities following exclusion from school (Gil et al. There is strong evidence that play-learning and integrated pedagogies have a positive impact on attainment, wellbeing and socioemotional development with important application for students with multilayered experiences of vulnerability.
n the context of an adolescent mental health crisis, this thesis directly addresses priorities for future research identified in a recent review (Bone & Fancourt 2022), and responds to an earlier call in LEGO's white paper 'Learning through Play' for more robust research into "the impact of play-learning and integrated pedagogies in secondary [education]" (Zosh et al. 2017), particularly for students with Special Educational Needs in low-income contexts, in areas where the available evidence on holistic education is "generally weak" (Bungay & Vella-Burrows, 2013, p. 44).
1. Alternative provision (AP) is a catch-all term which describes all educational provision outside of mainstream and special needs schools. Some of this provision is state-maintained, which means the government is responsible for this provision.
Organisations
People |
ORCID iD |
| Rebecca Reid (Student) |
Studentship Projects
| Project Reference | Relationship | Related To | Start | End | Student Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ES/Y001788/1 | 30/09/2023 | 29/09/2032 | |||
| 2930927 | Studentship | ES/Y001788/1 | 30/09/2024 | 29/06/2028 | Rebecca Reid |