School break times must be protected as playtime is ‘squeezed out' of children's lives, report warns

PLAYTIME has been “squeezed out” of children’s lives due to playground closures, increased traffic and use of no-ball-games signs in communal spaces, a major report has warned.
Five to seven-year-olds are spending 23 minutes less breaktime per day on average compared to their peers in 1995 — as screens and the online world dominate children’s time at home, the Raising the Nation Play Commission inquiry said.
It called on the Department for Education (DfE) to ringfence time in the school day for breaktimes and lunchtimes, and issue guidance discouraging the punitive withdrawal of playtime, criticising the curriculum’s “narrow emphasis on rote learning and examinations, reinforced by a highly pressurised accountability system.”
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