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Category: REPORT

EVENTSIMPORTANCE OF PLAYPOLICYREPORTRESEARCH

TOF’s Roundtable: Thriving through Play

Since 2004, The Opentree Foundation has worked towards empowering children to grow into well-rounded adulthoods through Play. Over the last two decades, our journey has made the following abundantly clear:

  1. The lack of play is a critical, complex problem
  2. There is a strong need to initiate meaningful dialogue and action to address this problem.

As an effort towards this, on November 7, 2024, The Opentree Foundation and Social Lens hosted a 60-minute roundtable, ‘Thriving through Play’, which was attended by over 200 participants.

The panelists were  Ratan Batliboi, principal architect, RJB-CPL, Seema Sharma, philanthropist and founder, Child Action UK, Swati Apte, a leadership coach and founder, The Arts Quotient, Priya Agrawal, founder, Antarang Foundation, and Deepika Mogilishetty, chief of partnerships at Ekstep. Drawing from rich experiences in their own fields, they shared deep, meaningful insights on the shifts needed to integrate play into ecosystems for children and adults. Along with the moderator, Vijaya Balaji, founder, Social Lens, this group of experts  discussed the critical need of Play, its transformative impact, and the need for a strong movement to put play at the heart of communities, schools and ecosystems. 

The discussion began with the context of play – what is our current ecosystem of play? What are the barriers to play, in terms of mindsets and perspectives, availability of play spaces, limited capital for play-centric research and interventions?

The current context of Play:

“Let’s advocate for shared spaces where play is accessible to all, from corporate lobbies to public venues. Open these areas to children and communities —where adults can witness and learn from the creativity that unfolds.
– Swati Apte Leadership Coach & Co-Founder, The Arts Quotient

Some of the most powerful insights that emerged from the roundtable focused on the open-endedness of Play, how it should be meaningfully integrated into communities, schools, public spaces in order to foster well-being,  develop key life skills in childhood and adulthood, and impact society at large. The conversation also highlighted the need to use play without reducing it to the prescriptive, highly structured ‘activity’ it has come to be over time, which points to the need for building capacities and mindsets  of teachers and caregivers for using play.

“Play is naturally inclusive – it goes beyond barriers of age, gender, and context. Playfulness is the joy of being, and a way of life.
– Ratan J. Batliboi Principal Architect, RJB CPL

Key ideas:

We were able to connect these key ideas and insights with impact data from our own programmes, and other studies that highlight the long-term impact of play, as well as the consequences for deprivation.

Through this roundtable, we were able to put forth a strong call for changing the way we understand play, use it, measure its impact, and most importantly, give it the rightful space it deserves in children’s lives and environments.

IMPORTANCE OF PLAYOTHERSREPORT

Annual Report 2022-23: Building a World of Play

At Toybank Development through Play, we have always believed in the Power of Play to transform lives, but in the past three years, its significance has shone brighter than ever. For nearly two decades, we have championed play-based learning, and today, the need for nurturing mental well-being and making informed choices has never been more urgent. 

As the Covid-19 restrictions eased, we had to adapt swiftly to the new post-pandemic reality. We recognised the challenges children were likely to face – behavioral issues and learning regression. They needed a well-structured approach to maximise the benefits of play. Throughout the pandemic years, we worked tirelessly to rebuild our Play Programme and welcoming new team members with expertise in play to quickly attend to these post-covid classroom challenges.

The Annual Report highlights our work done amid Covid-19 restrictions being eased, and the team swiftly adapting to the new post-pandemic reality. It also talks about our efforts towards building new Play Programmes and restructuring our current ones so Play reaches more children in India. In addition, you will also find snippets of our Play Practitioners talking about how they now use Play in their everyday classrooms.

As we step into a milestone year, we continue to work towards ensuring that every child’s Right to Play is realised, and that in our lifetime, we will be able to make play an integral part of every childhood in India.

We dream of a world where joy and playfulness guide the very foundations of early childhood education, and where every child’s right to engage in play is not just recognised, but celebrated.

–  Shweta Chari, Co-founder, CEO, Toybank

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2015-16: Every child needs play

Children are too full of life to be confined by just letters and numbers, and going beyond basic literacy and numeracy is the need of the hour in an ever-evolving world.

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2021-22: Navigating the new world

Our planet heralded the emergence of a ‘new normal’ as norms of living got redefined. But the childhood pandemic that denies children their Right to Play has barely waned.

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2016-17: Play without prejudice

Children know no malice – unacquainted as they are with the biases of religion, caste, race, or class.

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2017-18: Power of play

The mountain of rings is a riot of colours, like looping the rainbow!

It may seem simple, but the stacking activity is replete with benefits. It teaches about colours and sizes perception along with problem-solving; enhances coordination movement, stimulates visual development, strengthens the sense of touch and improves motor skills – just like play at large.

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2018-19: Reaching a milestone

Toybank is a journey we embarked on — to give every child in the world a toy to play with — 15 years ago. As we reach this significant milestone, our heart is brimming with not only pride for touching the lives of tens of thousands of children but also immense gratitude towards those who have helped us every step of the way to get here.

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2019-20: Ensuring happy childhoods

Mainstreaming Play requires concerted efforts. And our partners, collaborators and volunteers have held us in good stead in our endeavour. If we deny children their Right to Play, we deny them their right to understand the world.

DONATIONREPORT

Annual Report 2020-21: COVID-19 response

Mainstreaming Play requires concerted efforts. And our partners, collaborators and volunteers have held us in good stead in our endeavour. If we deny children their Right to Play, we deny them their right to understand the world.