
Episode 90:
Beyond ‘Just Play’: Understanding What Children Need
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Hosted by: Marina Robb
Show Notes:
This episode explores the tension between “just play” and the deeper understanding of what children truly need to develop and thrive.
Topics Include:
- Play is not a break from learning but the primary way children engage with and make sense of the world physically, socially, and emotionally
- True play is child-led, intrinsically motivated, and process-driven, and when these qualities are removed it becomes task or instruction rather than play
- Outdoor environments offer rich opportunities for sensory, physical, and exploratory play that support coordination, curiosity, and whole-body development
- Risky play - climbing, jumping, rough and tumble - is essential for building confidence, resilience, and an internal capacity to assess risk
- Social and imaginative play develop communication, empathy, identity, and emotional processing in ways that structured environments often limit
- The role of the adult is not to control outcomes but to hold space, observe, and introduce possibility without taking over
- Forest School brings a unique layer by introducing tools, fire, and cultural practices that deepen play and expand children’s worlds
- There is a constant dynamic of stepping in and stepping back, requiring skill, reflection, and responsiveness to each child’s needs
- Behaviour can often be reframed as a sensory or developmental need rather than something to be corrected or managed
- Each child has a unique sensory profile, meaning the same environment can regulate one child and overwhelm another
- Play may be the destination, but for some children it requires co-regulation, relationship, and careful support before it can emerge
Music by Geoff Robb: www.geoffrobb.com
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Try a few activities from our Forest School Activities Online Training.
Learn a boundary game, make clay eggs and nests, a crown out of willow, a pencil from elder and create your own plaster of paris moulds from real animal tracks!


