cross-posted from: https://feddit.dk/post/9969468

From the article:

Risky play is associated with greater resilience, self-confidence, problem-solving and social skills such as cooperation, negotiation and empathy, according to studies by Sandseter and others. When a study in Leuven, Belgium, gave four- and six-year-olds just two hours a week of opportunities for risky play over the course of three months, their risk-assessment skills improved compared with those of children in a control group2. In this study, the risky play took place at school, in a gym class and in the classroom.

  • shalafi@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Uh, all of that is addressed, in depth, in the post I linked. Hell, I pretty much said it in this post:

    You weren’t allowed to take risks.

    • agamemnonymous
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      1 day ago

      The post you linked was primarily about the direct fallout of COVID. They very directly said what they were talking about was a basically overnight charge.

      My point is about societal change. The kids aren’t “wusses”, they’re reacting rationally to a changing world. You grew up with much lesser consequences for the risks you took. Those are no longer justifiable risks. Even flipping a lightswitch can trigger a devastating chain of consequence if you have a crazy power tripping teacher, so why bother? Phone screens are backlit anyway.

      I take opposition to the way you’re framing this. Are you a wuss because you didn’t work 16 hours a day in a coalmine as a kid? Every generation thinks the next is too soft. The world changes, and the skills and techniques to successfully navigate it change.