comparemela.com


Considered such a core activity that it is assessed by teachers, play in Finland is also about learning risk and responsibility – competences Finnish society promotes to the extent that it is common for even seven-year-olds to walk to school on their own.
In short, writes Sahlberg, “Finland’s insight can boost grades and learning for all students, as well as their social growth, emotional development, health, wellbeing and happiness. It can be boiled down to a single phrase: let children play.”
The need is particularly urgent in schools reopening after pandemic lockdowns, he argued, since play will mitigate stress, promote resilience and allow children to rebuild relationships through physical activity: “They need that much more than they need academic pressure, graded assignments and excessive screen time.”

Related Keywords

Germany ,Munich ,Bayern ,Rome ,Lazio ,Italy ,Madrid ,Spain ,Finland ,Helsinki ,Eteläuomen Läi ,Mamoiada ,Sardegna ,Finnish ,Italian ,Spanish ,Redaktionsnetzwerk Deutschland ,Liliana Bonfiglio ,Katia Hueso ,Arja Salonen ,Elena Mart ,Luca Barone ,Daniel Grein ,Deutscher Kinderschutzbund ,Autonomous University Of Madrid ,Pasi Sahlberg ,Autonomous University ,ஜெர்மனி ,முனிச் ,பேயர்ன் ,ரோம் ,லேஸியோ ,இத்தாலி ,மாட்ரிட் ,ஸ்பெயின் ,பின்லாந்து ,ஹெல்சின்கி ,சர்டெஞனா ,பின்னிஷ் ,இத்தாலிய ,ஸ்பானிஷ் ,காடீய ஹியூசோ ,எலெனா மார்ட் ,லூகா பரோன் ,தன்னாட்சி பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் மாட்ரிட் ,தன்னாட்சி பல்கலைக்கழகம் ,

© 2025 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.