How to engage in possibility thinking in digital play in preschool today?
What if you could change your mindset about the use of digital play in early childhood education towards other possibilities? Children who live in a digital world are already asking the key question ‘what if” when they engage in the use of digital technologies.
This type of thinking is actually a natural progression from children’s traditional play. In fact, it is fundamental to how they learn as they explore different ways of thinking about objects.
As if Thinking
This type of questioning is momentary and is significant in its practice in the early childhood learning environment. Along with the question, it is also important to act ‘as if’. For young children, this opens up new ways of understanding and engagement in their digital play.
Children need opportunities to:
Sustained shared thinking encompasses this way of thinking and it is ideal to use in digital role-playing situations. You might ask the open-ended question “What would happen here if I pressed this button?” or “I wonder what would happen if …?”
Going Digital
‘As if’ and ‘what if’ questions fit right into the use of digital technology in early childhood education. In the digital play the journey of ‘what if’ thinking is typically shaped by the particular affordances of the digital technologies involved.
Digital play can offer resources that enable this type of thinking to truly take off! They include the following.
Sakr (2020)
Digital play in the early years also extends itself to gaming devices such as Nintendo Wii in which Craft believes the four Ps apply:
Trusting the ‘as if’ and ‘what if’ – what might be!
There are many benefits of incorporating digital play in early childhood education. The use of digital tools will help develop fine motor skills, enable them to develop their knowledge and understanding of the digital world, problem-solve, and promote creativity in the early childhood learning environment.
They also contribute to personal, social and emotional development.
Possibility thinking is essential in preschool education and as childhood changes as it allows you to consider how to nurture a high-trust culture that recognises children as active, capable digital producers and consumers, with virtual and actual lives.
As adults and early childhood teachers, it is up to us to enable exciting and relevant digital experiences for young children. And to do that, we need to harness the use of digital technology in play-based learning with our capacity to ask open-ended questions such as “What if..?” and to experiment with acting ‘as if’.
Case Study – Collaborative drawing on the iPad: What could it be?
Sakr (2020, p.67) offers a good example of possibility thinking in the following example.
Context: Two children (aged 6 years old) are drawing together on the iPad. They are playing the game Squiggle, which involves one of them starting a drawing and the other child finishing the drawing off. It is the turn of Child A to start the drawing. Child B is gazing intently at the iPad. They have a conversation about the drawing as it develops.
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B: agaaaaahhhhh
A: ahh ahhhh
B: that looks like a mouse, now it looks like a dinosaur
A: It’s a dinosaur
B: I knew it’s a dinosaur. I want one colour… arugh, what’s this?
A: What’s that?
B: Oh no, not dotty again
A: It’s so funny
B: Weee, that’s better
A: It’s like a squiggly… like a squiggly snake
B: It looks like a slide that’s so squiggly
A: It looks like a ….wow, colourful
B: With lots of colours
A: That’s the rainbow one
B: I love rainbows
A: Once I saw three rainbows
What strategies can you use?
There are three key early childhood pedagogies that you can apply that will support possibility thinking when integrating digital play learning experiences. This includes:
Standing back – this involves you stepping away from the children’s learning activity so that the children feel that the locus of control is with them and that they have the freedom to develop the digital play activity in the direction that they would like.
Profiling learning agency – when employing this early childhood pedagogy, it involves you placing emphasis on the child’s choice and their ideas.
Giving space and time – this early childhood pedagogy involves you making time available and constructing environments that are appropriate for possibility thinking. Children need time to engage in possibility thinking that are unrushed by adult-created deadlines.
5 Steps to think about
Here are five steps that you can employ today to help you nurture possibility thinking in your early childhood learning environment now:
By employing these early childhood pedagogies you will begin to engage in ‘possibility thinking’ and transform ‘what is’ to ‘what might be’ today. To learn more, click this link now.
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