Kids love pretending to be grown-ups with jobs. Jobs such as doctor, teacher, librarian, firefighter, scientist, vet, cook, artist or mail carrier. Encourage and enrich their pretend play and you’ll give your children beneficial literacy learning opportunities.
As you know, pretend play benefits children in so many ways – with social skills, vocabulary, imagination, self-control, resiliency and problem-solving.
A child’s pretend play begins around age two, but around age three, the child’s pretending becomes more complex. All the while, he is developing a literacy foundation through language and story. In fact, did you know that representational play, substituting one thing for another, is a very important skill for a child’s future reading success? If a child can pretend that a banana is a phone, he’ll have an easier time grasping the concept that letters represent sounds.
Pretend Play Tips
Pretend Play Job Ideas
Use these ideas to help your child get started playing. Sometimes all it takes is an idea and a child will spend hours in imaginative play. Use the jobs your child sees in his life or reads in stories. What else could you add to this list?
artist
cook
doctor
librarian
firefighter
scientist
teacher
office worker
mail carrier
vet
Add Props
Kids love dress-up clothes; it helps get them into their play roles. Build a dress-up clothes collection and a props box. Here are some prop ideas to get you started.
play food
hats
medical kit
stuffed animals
dolls
telephone
jewelry
coats
blankets
cardboard boxes
blocks
cars
play money
Add Books
Read picture books and nonfiction books to build your child’s background knowledge. Not only does this give your child more information, it also teaches him new vocabulary words. He can learn that artists display artwork in galleries and that veterinarians use X-ray machines. Imagine how the new information will expand his imaginative play!
Draw and Write
Have your child draw herself dressed up and doing the job. Then let her narrate a story for you to write to accompany her drawing. Say, “What sounds do you hear?” Help her listen for the sounds and use invented spelling to write the letters in the word.
Good Job
Science tells us that children learn by playing. The more you encourage this fun job pretend play, the more successful your child will be in reading and writing. So pat yourself on the back and say, “Good job!”