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Active STUDENTSHIP UKRI Gateway to Research

Inclusion through Play


Funder Economic and Social Research Council
Recipient Organization University of Cambridge
Country United Kingdom
Start Date Sep 30, 2024
End Date Jun 29, 2028
Duration 1,368 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Student; Supervisor
Data Source UKRI Gateway to Research
Grant ID 2930927
Grant Description

Inclusion through Play: The role of play-learning in supporting the wellbeing, socioemotional development and learning of adolescents who have been excluded from school.

Exclusion from school is a challenging and disruptive experience that significantly impacts the development of adolescents, often resulting in lost learning. School exclusions have now returned to pre-pandemic levels and suspensions, particularly for students in mid adolescence, are soaring again from last year's record breaking high numbers (DofE 2023).

However, a central problem facing the Alternative Provision1 sector is that very little evidence exists for how we might engage and improve trajectories for excluded pupils nor a consensus over what 'success' looks like in AP (Gil et al. 2017). Without a clear road map, currently, not enough is done to mitigate the damage done to a child's development and opportunities following exclusion from school (Gil et al.

There is strong evidence that play-learning and integrated pedagogies have a positive impact on attainment, wellbeing and socioemotional development with important application for students with multilayered experiences of vulnerability.

n the context of an adolescent mental health crisis, this thesis directly addresses priorities for future research identified in a recent review (Bone & Fancourt 2022), and responds to an earlier call in LEGO's white paper 'Learning through Play' for more robust research into "the impact of play-learning and integrated pedagogies in secondary [education]" (Zosh et al. 2017), particularly for students with Special Educational Needs in low-income contexts, in areas where the available evidence on holistic education is "generally weak" (Bungay & Vella-Burrows, 2013, p. 44).

1. Alternative provision (AP) is a catch-all term which describes all educational provision outside of mainstream and special needs schools. Some of this provision is state-maintained, which means the government is responsible for this provision.

All Grantees

University of Cambridge

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