Mar 13 / PARS Playwork

What's the difference between playwork training and PARS playwork training?

Cover showing PARS playwork practice article

In the article published in the Australian National Outside School Hours Service Alliance magazine, All About OSHC, Dr Shelly Newstead and Rarni Rothwell from QCAN discuss four differences between playwork training and PARS playwork training. Click here to read the full article
PARS Playwork – A Model for Embedding Critical Reflection in OSHC.

1. Practice not space

The first difference is that traditional playwork training has focussed on playwork as space and puts the emphasis on getting the environment right – loose parts (Nicholson, 1971), play types (Hughes, 2002) etc. Whilst Environmental Modification is part of the PARS model, PARS goes much further because it focuses on playwork as a practice, rather than a service. In other words, the PARS model focuses on how adults act and react (or not!) when they are ‘doing playwork’ with children. This of course involves some thinking about why the PARS playwork approach is often different to other approaches to working with children. This doesn't mean that we think that playwork is 'better' than other approaches to working with children - just different! 

2. Not 'busy doing nothing'!

The second difference is that playwork is often seen as synonymous with ‘just standing back’ and characterised as the ‘do nothing profession’. There’s two problems with this. First of all, it’s created problems with playwork’s public image, as those outside the playwork field can’t (perhaps understandably!) see the value in adults being paid for just standing around doing nothing! And secondly, it’s really

not the case that playworkers ‘do nothing’. We often intervene in children’s time and space for a whole range of reasons. It’s just that the situations we do (or don’t) intervene in and why we do (or don’t!) intervene are often different to the choices that other professionals might make. The PARS model enables practitioners to make decisions about what’s appropriate intervention from a playwork perspective (as opposed to, say, from a teaching or even a parental perspective). It also enables practitioners to be able to explain those decisions to other people. And because PARS provides practitioners with language to explain their interventions (or lack of them), they can reassure other professionals and parents that they are, in fact, exercising their professional judgement when, to everybody else, it might just look like they are ‘busy doing nothing’!

3. Childhood, not play

The third difference is that traditional playwork focusses on the type of  play which is usually described as ‘free play’, and the need for children to have this form of play in their lives and for adults to leave children to play in their own way. PARS has a broader aim, which goes back to the

original philosophy of the adventure playground pioneers, who saw play  not as an aim, but an outcome. The adventure playground pioneers
recognised that play was an important part of children’s culture – a culture which was very different from the dominant adult culture. The
adventure playground pioneers felt that children were deprived not just of play, but of their childhoods by an adult world which prioritised
adult needs and perspectives at the expense of children’s needs and perspectives. The PARS model is based on that founding philosophy of the adventure playground pioneers – not children’s right to
play, but children’s right to be children, with all the ‘quirks’ and bafflements that that may involve from an adult perspective! PARS practitioners work with those divergences where the child andadult  worlds meet (and often collide!), rather than going in with their own adult  agendas of ‘learning’, or ‘development’, or even ‘play’. PARS playwork  is therefore ‘pro-child’ (as John Bertelsen, the first playworker put it), rather than ‘pro-play’, and PARS practitioners respect and protect time and space for childhood, rather than just play. 

4. Developed from research

The fourth key difference is that the PARS model of playwork practice has been developed from research. PARS was created by Dr Shelly Newstead as part of her doctoral research question, 'What does it mean to do playwork from a playwork perspective?' What tends to happen in the playwork field is that different people from different personal and professional backgrounds take up the idea of ‘playwork’ (maybe from going on a training course themselves or reading a book) and then interpret – or often reinterpret - ‘playwork’ from their own perspective, often then becoming playwork trainers themselves. Whilst this can bring benefits in terms of new ways of thinking about playwork, there is also a considerable downside in that playwork ends up, as Peter Heseltine (1982) once put it, “all things to all men and women, and about as relevant." Shelly's doctoral research analysed over 400 original works by the UK adventure playground pioneers to find out how they defined and described their new approach to working with children, and found that the same theories and practices had been repeated for several decades but had never been put together in a holistic, accessible way. The PARS model includes the original philosophy, theories, methods and techniques used consistently by playworkers over many years and provides a systematic framework for anybody who works with children in their leisure time to make professional judgements about whether it is necessary to get involved in children's time and space. Now that playwork is being used internationally, it’s even more important to develop a consistent understanding of what playwork is and what it is for. This is why three levels of PARS training programmes are accredited to ensure that consistency of understanding and practice, no matter what type of supervised setting you work in or where in the world that setting is.