Introduction 1. A Short History of the Development of Evolutionary Playwork 2. Evolutionary Playwork Values 3. What is Evolutionary Play? 4. Play Types and the Playwork Menu 5. Combinatorial Flexibility, Non-Specialisation, Calibration and Contextualisation. 6. Stimulation Theory and Play Deprivation 7. An Introduction to Evolutionary Playwork 8. What is Evolutionay Playwork? 9. The Evolutionary Playwork Construct of the Child 10. The Evolutionary Playworker 11. Safety, Participation and Consultation 12. Is the Play Setting Working? 13. Some Deeper Considerations Conclusion
Bob Hughes has been a theoretical and applied playworker for nearly forty years. He is widely published on the subject of Play and Playwork and was the first Editor of the International Play Journal. He has been the National Coordinator of PlayEducation, an independent playwork agency providing training and research services, since 1982.
"This book is brilliant: so many aspects of play and playwork practice explored and expounded and in a way that actually, for once, makes it fairly easy for the average playworker to understand ... Those of you who read this, and those of you who choose to engage with the philosophy laid out within, will become better at the work you do with children and young people ... this text will not only have an effect on playworkers but has the potential to have a fundamental and profound impact on everyone who is working in the children’s workforce", ip-dip: for professionals in play, November 2011"This second edition of Bob Hughes's Evolutionary Playwork is an outstanding book that should be read carefully by anyone who's interested in play, and then read again and again. Its fourteen chapters, extensive reference section, and numerous figures provide the most comprehensive and up-to-date coverage of human play of which I am aware and a bonus is that the book is an easy read with minimal jargon. And, not only does Hughes cover vast amounts of material on the evolution and significance of play, he also makes practical suggestions that play workers will find invaluable", Professor Marc Bekoff, University of Colorado, Psychology Today
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