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Wednesday, June 3, 1998 Published at 15:37 GMT 16:37 UK Education Children lose out as schools squeeze play time ![]() A quarter of junior schools have abolished afternoon breaks Jack might end up a dull boy, according to research which says that school play time is getting shorter. It says fears about bullying and bad behaviour, the need for more teaching time and concerns over playground supervision are among the causes of between a quarter and a third of schools reducing the length of breaks.
"If anything untoward is going to happen, teachers expect it to happen at break time," he said. As a consequence schools across the country are trimming back on time in the playground, a trend that the survey suggests more schools will follow.
For some children, he says, play time is almost the only forum for making friends and spending time with their peer group. Pupils who are driven to school by their parents and who spend little time outside of their homes use play times as their main chance to mix freely with other children. As such, in contrast to their teachers, children have a far more positive view of break time as an important part of their social life.
It was also found in the survey that teachers believed that pupils were less able to play constructively than in the past, with traditional games in decline and "children idling around the playground not seeming to know what to do with themselves". The research concludes that the importance of break times may be too easily overlooked and that "the danger is that we may recognise their value long after changes have severely reduced them". Comment on this issue in Talking Point
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