How young children played during the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 in Ireland: findings from the Play and Learning in the Early Years (PLEY) Covid-19 study
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Abstract
The Covid-19 measures put in place by governments around the world to restrict the movement of people and limit the spread of the virus have also impacted on children’s play. The importance of play in children’s lives has been well documented and research shows that it plays a role in all aspects of development including physical, cognitive and socioemotional development (e.g. Ginsburg 2007: 182, Fisher et al. 2008: 306, Howard and McInnes 2013: 738). Different types of play have been classified, as have the different ways that children can learn and develop through play (e.g. Parten 1932: 249, Whitebread et al. 2012: 31). This chapter will examine some key findings on changes in young children’s play in an Irish context based on parental responses gathered during the first Covid-19 lockdown in spring 2020.
The evidence on children’s play during the pandemic to date suggests that globally there have been a number of changes (e.g. Barron et al. 2021: 372; Moore et al. 2021: 4). New research is still emerging but it seems that commonalities across countries during lockdowns included increases in time spent on screens and on indoor play, and decreases in physical activity and outdoor play. A cross-country comparative study of children’s indoor play during the lockdown indicated many similar impacts on play behaviours and activities, irrespective of country, specific cultural factors or restrictions in place (Barron et al. 2021: 375). Children’s development and how they play does not operate in a vacuum as children are influenced by the world around them and often use play to make sense of their experiences (e.g. Hirsh-Pasek, Singer, and Golinkoff 2006: 39; Hayes, O’Toole, and Halpenny 2017: 88).
According to an article on the World Economic Forum, ninetynine percent of the world’s children have lived with restrictions on movement and interactions because of Covid-19 (Fore and Hijazi 2020). The pandemic disrupted every aspect of children’s lives, including their health, development, learning and behaviour, their families’ economic security, their protection from violence and abuse, and their mental health. Recent research studies have also borne this out (e.g. Almeida et al. 2021: 413; Egan et al. 2021: 925; López-Aymes et al. 2021: 1, Thorell et al. 2021: 649; Thorn and Vincent-Lancrin 2022: 383). Under Article 31 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNICEF 1989), children have the right to play, although this is often a neglected right (Shakel 2015: 48).
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Egan, S. M., Pope, J., Beatty, C. and Hoyne, C. (2023) 'How young children played during the Covid-19 lockdown in 2020 in Ireland: findings from the Play and Learning in the Early Years (PLEY) Covid-19 study' in Beresin, A. and Bishop, J., eds.,Play in a Covid frame: everyday pandemic creativity in a time of isolation, Cambridge: Open Book Publishers, 265-284, available: https://doi.org/10.11647/OBP.0326

