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Building Equity by Building Playgrounds

KABOOM!/Facebook

Too many communities of color lack access to the spaces and facilities needed for quality play. And even if those spaces do exist nearby, children won’t play there if they don’t feel safe, welcome, included and comfortable. “Playspace Inequity” is the term that the national nonprofit has given this phenomenon, and the is how the organization aims to solve it in five years.

This commitment is not a new impulse for KABOOM! but rather one that reaches back to 1995, when founder Darell Hammond read a Washington Post story about two D.C. children who couldn’t find anywhere to play and subsequently died from heat exhaustion in an abandoned car.

Here’s what I learned when I spoke to Drustva Delgadillo, senior director of partnership development, Sally Dorman, director of regional partnerships and Kevin Paul, associate director of thought leadership about how they are scaling impact and partnering with municipal systems across the country:

Philadelphia Chinatown Development Corporation—PlayZa

A daily allowance of play. call for 180 minutes of physical play seven days a week. “What we really need to do is bring back play for children,” said Dr. Juana Willumsen, WHO focal point for childhood obesity and physical activity.

And the American Academy of Pediatrics , noting, “Children play harder outdoors than indoors and they need daily opportunities to do so…. Playing outside promotes curiosity, creativity and critical thinking.”

Delgadillo, the mother of two young children, agrees, noting that child care providers need to provide play spaces in order to receive their quality ratings. “Just walking children to an open space isn’t enough,” she says. “That’s the need that we are trying to address.”

Historical inequity interferes with today’s play. Research by KABOOM! shows that lower socioeconomic status, racial and ethnic minority and rural populations have limited access in neighborhoods compared to wealthier, white and urban groups. It’s important to acknowledge that Playspace Inequity didn’t just happen. Tug on the thread of playgrounds and you get to all these other issues that communities can’t thrive because of historic and institutional racism and other factors.

According to Paul, housing policy, redlining and segregation all contribute to the problem. “We also see surrounding physical and social conditions, as well as issues like limited access to transportation, personal safety concerns and lack of inclusive programming,” he says, adding, “If we want to make an impact, if we actually want to create a difference for kids, we’re going to have to work at that systems level, because that’s where the problems originated.”

A child’s playground plan

Data and play are not opposites. KABOOM! has gotten sophisticated about play. To evaluate the 16 playgrounds built with funding from the William Penn Foundation for the Play Everywhere Philly Challenge, involved geospatial mapping and analysis of neighborhood context; Environmental Assessment of Public Recreation Spaces; System for Observing Play and Leisure Activity observations; and on-site surveys of adult, English-speaking visitors.

Sean Perkins, chief of early childhood education at the Office of Children and Families, says, “Philadelphia, under the Kennedy administration, has clearly prioritized investing in its families, particularly its youngest children. The Office of Children and Families is excited to continue its partnership with KABOOM! to identify areas of the city that most need playful learning environments by both meeting with residents and using available data.” Dorman praises the Office of Children and Families for their holistic approach and also mentions the work of in addressing inequities through development of parks and recreation centers.

KABOOM! also collaborated with Child Care Aware of America and Vanguard to create a story map capturing Philadelphia’s landscape of play space inequity for kids ages zero to six. In addition to sophisticated mapping, the project included survey data from child care providers and other community members.

A has zeroed in on play in rural communities, generating data that advocates use to push for expanding the tax base to generate more public investment in play spaces.

There’s more to play than playgrounds. The KABOOM! team embraces what Dorman calls a “vision for place-based equity that’s focused on everywhere kids live, learn and play,” which means parks, schools, libraries, child care centers and beyond.

Moving slowly is a feature of their approach, she says. “We typically start with assessment work to understand where the gaps exist currently, and then from there we engage community members, city leaders and partners who are already doing this work. We ask them, ‘What is the data showing? Is this data accurate? What do you see as barriers or challenges that are perpetuating place-based inequity in your cities and communities? What do you see as potential solutions?’”

Paul notes that they especially value “folks who have been in neighborhoods for generations; they’re the experts in their community and their block.” They also ask children what they want in a playground—and listen to the answers.

There’s more to playgrounds than play. All the data gathering and community surveys takes a lot more effort than just pulling up to an empty lot and unloading the equipment. That time is an essential part of their approach. “The more we can involve community in all this, the better,” says Paul. “If you come in with a fully baked solution, something that has just sort of popped out of the box, then there’s not as much sense of collective ownership.”

KABOOM! is and always will be known for building playgrounds, and over the years the organization has gained an appreciation of what these spaces mean to people of all ages. “They’re important for kids and families,” says Delgadillo, “but they also play a role in building community as a whole and making communities safer and more welcoming, more beautiful.”

This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on The 74. Learn more here.

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