Pretend Play

Imaginative play is a play that encourages a child to use his or her imagination. To pretend to be something or someone else, to set imaginary tasks and carry them out using props and symbolically changing them to fit in with the play. This process can be played out alone, or as part of a group. Imaginative play is not just a way to have fun it can also be used to create scenarios that may cause a child to have anxieties, such as a trip to the dentist, doctors or a holiday.   It can also be beneficial in preparation of any major life changing event, such as going to school, moving house, a new baby and all the transitions they will face in life. It is thought that prior to all these events the use of role play, puppets and props to create the pretend scenario, acting out the scenario step by step including every last detail that the child will experience. This will hopefully eliminate the fear of the unknown and turn the anxieties and negative feelings about the situation in to a positive.
Children on the autistic spectrum respond well to learning through imaginative play as it can facilitate creative spontaneity, by acting out different scenarios. It is thought to help and gain better understanding on how the world works and encourage them to understand abstracts concepts and relationships. The use of role play and props can also help children understand feelings and how their actions can affect the way someone feels, as a child is thought to have a very concrete way of thinking and wouldn’t usually consider the feelings of others. The use of puppets creating the scenario when one puppet has upset the other and explaining in a way a child understands why the puppet is upset. Also encouraging the child to comfort the sad puppet this should encourage the child to show empathy. By placing the rouge puppet into time out this will introduce the child to consequence. Many different cognitive strategies are show during pretence play, such as negotiation, problem...