Lauran Doak

Researching how children with learning disabilities who have minimal speech communicate and connect with others at home, school and other everyday settings.

Realising the ‘right to play’ in the special school playground


Journal article


L. Doak
International Journal of Play, vol. 9(4), 2020, pp. 414-438

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
Doak, L. (2020). Realising the ‘right to play’ in the special school playground. International Journal of Play, 9(4), 414–438.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Doak, L. “Realising the ‘Right to Play’ in the Special School Playground.” International Journal of Play 9, no. 4 (2020): 414–438.


MLA   Click to copy
Doak, L. “Realising the ‘Right to Play’ in the Special School Playground.” International Journal of Play, vol. 9, no. 4, 2020, pp. 414–38.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{l2020a,
  title = {Realising the ‘right to play’ in the special school playground},
  year = {2020},
  issue = {4},
  journal = {International Journal of Play},
  pages = {414-438},
  volume = {9},
  author = {Doak, L.}
}

Abstract

ABSTRACT In this paper I mobilise a multimodal ethnographic data fragment depicting a moment of play in a UK ‘special school' playground to unpack the challenges of realising the ‘right to play' (Article 31, UN Convention on the Rights of the Child) in a non-inclusive play space. I show that play (im)possibilities were delineated by the physical boundaries of the playground, the absence of non-disabled peers and a lack of symbol-based resources to support playful meaning-making. Nevertheless, the children execute a short play event through multimodal embodied communication encompassing pleasure, frustration, invitations, rejections, acceptances, and negotiations over resources. I argue that this brief play event instantiates broader debates around the ‘right to play': specifically, to what extent this right can be realised in a non-inclusive playground, whether autistic children require play ‘training’, and how diverse forms of play can be scaffolded by staff in the absence of non-disabled children.


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