Posts Tagged ‘swing’
Saturday, June 5th, 2010
A+ Playgrounds … If you are looking for more information about our playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529) … Nationwide Sales and Installs.
The Joy of Playground Installation
I love this time of year. The weather gets great; the sun is shining and we start building many more playgrounds. I get to be out of the office and out on the playgrounds. I love the installation of new playgrounds; it is a wonderful feeling to be a part of a installation, building joy for children. You start with nothing and, in a week or two, you have this beautiful shiny piece of fun for children, which makes you feel great about what you have done. Then, seeing the joy on their faces makes all the sweat well worth the while.
We, as playground Contractors, have the responsibility to do the best job we can and to always keep the child’s safety in mind, So much time has been spent designing and manufacturing safe playgrounds, and the contractor is the final part. The playground contractor can build a safe, compliant, beautiful playground or they can go out and make a mess of what has taken years of work designing and manufacturing. Many people have spent their lives doing research and writing the guidelines so these playgrounds can be manufactured and built safe. All it takes is one playground contractor to come in and undo years of work by building a playground the way they see fit, and not going by the installation instructions.
Many think it would be rare to find one new playground that has been built in the past few years that has failed an inspection, but, sad to say, this is not the case. I know first hand, as I am out doing many inspections. I always seem to find the same items wrong with the playgrounds, and I always wonder how can this be. They had installation instructions and should know better. I have found that, no matter whose equipment it is there, there are still many bad installations going on, parts in the wrong place, wrong bolts being used in the wrong area, swings with the bolts pushed up from the bottom, etc. Why? Because the contractor did not take the time to read the installation instructions, or they have been doing this for so long they think they know best.
Installation manuals can change from the last unit or piece of equipment that you installed, so read the instructions every time. Do not think because you have been doing this for twenty-five years you know best.
I know all manufacturers take great pride in their equipment, as they should. However, if they do not go out and see what is being done to their equipment from time to time, they have no idea of how bad their equipment can look. If it looks bad due to poor installation, the customer does not know; the community does not know. All they know is that the equipment with the manufacturer’s name on it looks bad.
I have always known how important playground contractors or installers are; they can get you more business by doing a great job, or they can cost you business. It is their job to take all the hard work that has been put into providing safe playground equipment for children and become the most important part, building it right. To me, they are one of the most important parts of the chain, doing a good job, taking pride that they have followed all the manufacturer’s instructions and all the guidelines and have built a perfect playground. It is a wonderful feeling to walk away and know that you did a great job and made sure the playground was built as it should have been. But most of all, it is a comfort to know that you would let your own children play on that playground.
I do know we have many more great contractors and installers than bad, and I do not believe that any contractor sets out to do a bad job. As people, we all make mistakes. But, when we find we have used the wrong hardware, we go back and fix the mistake to make it right. It is essential to perform a full audit on the playground and check your installation before it is turned over to the customer and the children.
What we all do is build safe fun playgrounds, so please make sure you are doing a perfect job. The children are depending on you for their safety, and if you are in this industry, you know how special we all are in the lives of so many children. I could not imagine a world with out a playground and the laughter of children on it, and to know you were a part of that equation is a feeling like no other.
Karen H. Spears, CPSI, CPI
Kids Play Inc.
Past Chair
A+ Playgrounds … If you are looking for more information about our playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529) … Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Tags: A+ Playgrounds, aplusplaygrounds, commercial playground equipment, playground, playground equipment, Playground Installation, slide, slides, swing, swings Posted in Uncategorized | No Comments »
Tuesday, May 4th, 2010
If you are looking for more information about our playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529) … Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Why Play?
“We do not stop playing because we grow old;
we grow old because we stop playing.”
- Benjamin Franklin
By Melinda Bossenmeyer
For the generation of Americans that lived by the daily adage, “you must come inside when the street lights come on,” outdoor play was intuitive and occurred naturally in the course of everyday American life. Baby boomers recite the street light regulation as one of America’s unwritten rules that most children understood and practiced. Certainly that was the case for those of us who lived within “city limits.”
For another set of children, their unwritten rule about the limits of daily play would have supported the notion of “play” up until “the cows come home”, which by farm standards meant that play had ended because there was work that needed to be done before dinner.
Parents then also shared another universal unwritten rule on play, which was practiced in both cities and farms across America, because their verbiage “go out and play”, guaranteed a resulting peace and quiet inside the house.
Few would disagree that things have changed drastically. Children today spend significantly less time outdoors than children did say 30 years ago. Rough-and-tumble play reserved for outdoors has given way to sedentary activities on video games or computers.
This gives rise to a foreboding question raised in The Greater Good Magazine’s issue on Can We Play? [1] In today’s fast paced knowledge worker society, lies another important question regarding play which will be examined in this article. Why play?
Understanding the importance of play
To answer that question we must first understand the importance of play. If we understand, on the most basic level, that play is essential to leading a happy and healthy life, then one would have to answer, “Yes. We should all make time for play, not just children but adults as well.”
An overwhelming body of research on the issue of the importance of play has continued to grow especially recently. From babbling as a baby in the practice of early language development to coed adult slow pitch softball leagues, play is practice for life’s many challenges.
Take for example, “follow the leader”. Children learn to lead, follow, cooperate, imitate, plan and negotiate their own conflicts. Or as in the case of adult softball, play is a laboratory for practicing work related skills of teamwork, loyalty and dedication.
Play is the spontaneous activity in which children engage to amuse and to occupy themselves. It is also a way children optimize their own brain development. Viewed from this perspective, the nostalgic observation that children “no longer play” should be taken seriously because the consequences for children’s well-being extend beyond the problem of childhood obesity. [2]
Play and development
A 2007 report from the American Academy of Pediatrics documents that play promotes not only behavioral development but brain growth as well. The University of North Carolina’s Abecedarian Early Child Intervention program found that children who received an enriched, play-oriented parenting and early childhood programs had significantly higher IQ’s at age five than did a comparable group of children who were not in the program (105 vs. 85 points). [3]
“With play on the decline, we risk losing these and many other benefits. For too long, we have treated play as a luxury that kids, as well as adults, could do without. But the time has come for us to recognize why play is worth defending: It is essential to leading a happy and healthy life,” according to play expert and author, David Elkind. He encourages us by saying, “When we adults unite play, love, and work in our lives, we set an example that our children can follow. That just might be the best way to bring play back into the lives of our children—and build a more playful culture.” [4]
Play and its close relationship with recess
Recess contributes to academic success.
Psychologist Anthony Pellegrini, one of America’s foremost researchers on play and physical activity in children found that elementary school children become increasingly inattentive when recess is delayed.
The 2009 February issue of the Journal Pediatrics , shows that students who received more than 15 minutes of free play a day were better behaved than those who had no recess period. The researchers argue that these findings, along with similar findings from other studies, “support the importance of recess for student attentiveness in the classroom.”
The relationship between academics and play appears to be in constant tension, as though adding to one results in taking away from the other. Nothing could be further from the truth. It would appear that recess contributes to academic success in a variety of ways.
Play and Acedemics
Contrary to popular opinion, education is not a race. It is faulty reasoning to believe that the sooner children enter into an academic setting the sooner they learn to read, calculate and acquire academic skills, thus gaining a step-up on pint size adversaries. Child development experts and child psychologist agree that children develop readiness for learning most skills through play. [5]
Rushing children through instruction that they are not ready for can result in a frustrated child who begins to question their learning abilities and internalize their perceived failings by feeling “less than” the child sitting next to them. The old adage, “success breeds success and failure breeds failure” should not be ignored. Yet, since the No Child Left Behind Act was implemented in 2002, there has been a general focus on academics much to the dismay of the play community.
Early childhood programs shifted their emphasis from play, to a more academic curriculum. The result, according to several studies by Kathy Hirsch-Pasek and colleagues, indicate that there has not been an academic advantage in either reading or math for children in these programs. In fact, children dropped into academic settings too soon, show increased test anxiety, were less creative, and displayed more negative attitudes toward school than other children in play oriented preschool environments. Further, by pushing them into certain activities before they are ready, we run the risk of stunting the development of important intellectual, social, or emotional skills in our children.
Consider the metaphor of the flower. While it is true we can engineer it’s early bloom through artificial light, and Miracle Grow type nutrients, the lifespan of the engineered bloom is significantly decreased and undeniably more fragile when compared to a flower grown in the natural environment and allowed the luxury of time. Children too should be afforded this opportunity to unfold naturally without artificial engineering.
It is important to acknowledge that play is not meant to be educational. Rather education flows naturally into the environment of a child at play.
Child’s play as work
An overscheduled, overprotected child might seem like a distinctly modern problem, but in fact the tension between a child’s unstructured play and an adult’s version of child’s play look very different. Children’s play agenda is a never-ending search for “Joy”, while a parent’s play agenda for their child might be lodged in the “get ahead” syndrome. For example, a parent enrolls their young child in a gymnastics class so their child can be the next Nadia Cominici or Mary Lou Retton, rather than because their child loves tumbling.
Playing with things instead of playing with others
Why? Because we like You!
In 1955, with the advent of television in most American homes, play entered into a new arena, Television.
In 1955, the Mickey Mouse Club (MMC) burst on the scene and became the first TV show exclusively for children entertained by children.
Mattel, one of the early sponsors of MMC expanded advertising to daily commercials instead of the previous Christmas sales season, and by doing so contributed to an infinitely exploding toy market that even today, continues to expand.
You may be wondering what historical significance this has with play? The answer is straight forward. In a nutshell, this was the beginning of children playing with things, rather than playing with each other.
Why the decline in play?
You may be thinking, with so much support for play, why is it declining? First, technology is one culprit. Technological innovations such as TV, video games, computers and electronic games have infiltrated American homes with unintended consequences. Our modern technology has contributed to “keeping children indoors”, where researchers have long indicated children are most often sedentary, and which limits time outdoors where children are more active. [6]
Technology contributes to keeping children indoors.
We know that children naturally play. It is not necessary to “teach” a child to play. Developmentally, play is motivated by pleasure. Play is instinctive and part of the maturational process. It is the supervising adults that have curtailed the time allotted for self motivated child play.
One has to wonder, are we getting in the way of children’s play? Take for example the commercial toy makers. With the downturn in the economy, it was reported that toymakers saw a decline in profits for the first time in decades. I wonder how many toys the average preschooler has acquired? Is this really necessary? For centuries children have demonstrated that they can “pretend” and transform everyday objects into magical playthings at a moments notice. John Albee declared, “All movable objects are playthings to [a child]. He makes them also, like the Creator, out of nothing; if he wants a horse, he has one in an instant by straddling a stick or tying a string to a companion.” [7]
Another general assumption for the decline in play is a perception that certain neighborhoods are considered “unsafe. ” However, this issue deserves further thought and consideration. An interesting research study examined a national sample of preschool children and mothers’ perceptions of neighborhood safety. While there was a positive relationship between a mom’s perceptions of safety and their children’s TV viewing time, researchers were not able to show a significant link between their outdoor playtime and/or risk for childhood obesity. [8]
Anxious parents scheduled children’s play
Parents and other anxious adults may agonize over how to keep children safe and entertained at play. We, as adults, need to learn from the past that youngsters crave and deserve a chance at playtime to do whatever they want to do, create whatever they want to create or generally have the freedom and luxury to do nothing at all.
These days, parents are more likely to organize “play dates” where children are supervised by parents, or schedule their child into organized team sport, rather than allowing their children to hang out on the street corner waiting for spontaneous play with neighborhood kids.
Why play?
Play holds the key to a happy and healthy life.
We return to our original question, Why Play? First, let’s differentiate the difference between work and play. “Work consists of whatever a body is obliged to do, and Play consists of whatever a body is not obliged to do,” writes Mark Twain in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. I find myself yearning for the days of Tom Sawyer when leisure antics were the norm for children’s behavior and play was natural, spontaneous, and yes, sometimes mischievous.
Recently we, adults and children alike, appear to have lost our motivation to play. With the economy spiraling downward, fear and uncertainty can manifest itself into anger and frustration. Who feels like playing in these uncertain times?
But for children, oblivious to the worlds’ angst and anxieties, let’s not forget as caregivers we can encourage children to go outdoors and play. As childcare workers, we also hold within our power the important ability to balance the time spent indoors and out. Schools and daycare centers can bring back recess and playtime for children by scheduling a minimum of 30 minute break times in the day for fun and unadulterated play.
Why play? It is because play is the antidote for depression, isolation, and fearfulness. And it is play that holds the key to leading a happy and healthy life whether we are 1 or 100 and everywhere in-between.
If you are looking for more information about our playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529) … Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Tags: A+ Playgrounds, aplusplaygrounds, Journal Pediatrics, play, playground, playground equipment, swing, swings Posted in Uncategorized | 7 Comments »
Wednesday, March 10th, 2010
If you are looking for more information about our playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529) … Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Playground Surface Is a Safety Key
Installing and maintaining the right surface underneath your playground is crucial to prevent injuries.
by Mary Kay Clunies-Ross
The most important part of your school’s playground may be what’s underneath it. Have you checked lately to see what that surface looks like?
Every year parent groups across the country spend tens of thousands of dollars on new playground equipment. It’s a good investment, too. Playgrounds have improved tremendously. Monkey bars coated with lead paint and located above unforgiving asphalt have been replaced by equipment engineered for safety and child development.
Today’s playgrounds are not only fun for kids, they help children develop motor skills and coordination, imagination, confidence, and social skills.
But it’s easy to forget all that when a child gets hurt. And despite all of the consideration about safety, children do get hurt. The federal government estimates that 200,000 children are treated in emergency rooms every year for playground injuries.
Almost 60 percent of those injuries are from falls, so if you’re wondering how safe your school playground is, look down.
Asphalt and concrete, obviously, are out. Even soils and hard-packed dirt don’t absorb shocks well, and grass and turf are too susceptible to wear and environmental conditions. Instead, today’s playgrounds use loose fill or synthetics such as rubber as a surface. About 80 percent of all public playgrounds have appropriate surfacing (compared to only 9 percent of home playgrounds), according a 2001 survey by the U. S. Consumer Product Safety Commission. The CPSC tests materials to determine their effectiveness in preventing serious head injuries.
Just because your playground had proper surfacing when it was installed, however, doesn’t mean it still does. Surfacing must be inspected and maintained regularly, a task that often goes undone.
Surface Depth
Susan Hudson, education director for the National Program for Playground Safety at the University of Northern Iowa, says that parents and school officials need to inspect their playground covering with two measures in mind: the placement of the materials and their depth.
Surfacing comes in three types: organic loose fill, inorganic loose fill, and synthetics. Organic loose fill includes bark mulch; wood chips; and shredded hardwood, called engineered wood fibers. Inorganic loose fill includes sand and gravel.
Loose fill is relatively inexpensive, making it a popular choice for playground surfacing. It spreads easily, but that means the depth can change significantly. It might blow away, children might dig in it, or it might simply be tracked off the playground over time.
The CPSC publishes recommended depths of loose fill based on the type of fill and the height of the playground equipment. But there is a good rule of thumb.
“We recommend loose covering at least 9 and preferably 12 inches deep,” says Hudson. “And you need to look under slides, overhead ladders, and all the places where kids jump or land. In playgrounds across America, we’re doing a good job of having the right material but not a good job of having it at the right depth.”
It’s important to check the depth of your playground surface a few times a year. And the surface should be raked to redistribute the fill regularly, even weekly or daily, depending on how much use the equipment gets. Loose fill also tends to compact over time. When it becomes compacted, it becomes much less effective in absorbing shocks and thus, preventing injuries. Dig down into the material to make sure it hasn’t hardened, especially in high-impact areas such as the landing zone for the slide. Gravel, in particular, may need to be broken up occasionally.
Another issue with loose fill is that it hides materials such as broken glass and animal waste. Check regularly to make sure your surface is free of debris.
Synthetic surfacing includes rubber, rubber over foam mats or tiles, poured urethane, and rubber composites. These surfaces tend to be more expensive, and whether you can use them or not depends on factors such as how level the ground is. Synthetic materials need to be checked for wear, particularly in high-impact areas. Check to make sure the material hasn’t curled at the edges, which can be a tripping hazard. Also, look for cracks or other damage caused by frost.
One advantage of using mats rather than a poured synthetic surface, notes Hudson, is that they can be replaced individually. Just because the tiles under the slide are worn doesn’t mean the whole playground surface needs to be replaced. But be sure to use mats that are appropriately shock-absorbent and durable for playground use.
Placement
In addition to maintaining the depth of the surface, it’s important to make sure it is positioned properly. Materials need to be under all the equipment and extend at least six feet on all sides of stationary equipment, Hudson says. According to the CPSC, about half the time children fall on a playground, they fall off a piece of climbing equipment.
Swings and slides are the next trouble areas, causing about 36 percent of injuries. There are simple formulas for covering the areas around slides and swings.
For slides, covering should be six feet around the structure itself. In the landing area in front of the slide, the covering should extend a distance equal to the height of the slide, plus an additional two to four feet. For example, for a five-foot slide the landing area should be at least seven feet.
For swings, take the height and double it. For a swing eight feet tall, Hudson says, there should be good covering 16 feet in front of and 16 feet behind the swing. “The danger with swings is not just the swinging,” she says. “It’s that kids swing as high as they can and then jump off.”
If you are looking for more information about our playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529) … Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Tags: aplusplaygrounds, commercial playground equipment, CPSC, loose fill, National Program for Playground Safety, NPPS, playground equipment, playground surface. playground surfacing, slide, slides, swing, swings Posted in Uncategorized | 4 Comments »
Friday, January 29th, 2010
Parks, schools and daycares with commercial playground equipment are a great way to bring communities together for pretty much any occasion. Playground equipment can teach children the value of sharing and turn an ordinary playground into a world of imagination. Playground equipment is much different to adults that to children in that the scenarios are constantly changing with the imagination of the each individual. A jungle gym may be imagined as a space ship or a seesaw may turn into a row boat. Children get a chance to be active, improve their motor skills and strengthen their coordination.
When was the last time you slid down a slide, hung upside down on the monkey bars? For most people, memories of playing on the commercial playground equipment are a positive point to reflect on. Now that many adults have children of their own, more time is spent watching them swing on the monkey bars, or slide down the slides of the commercial play ground equipment found at their local schools, park or daycare. With so many parents working full- time and over-time it can be hard to find enough time to do fun activities with your children. Taking your children to the park is an excellent way to get out of the house to participate in activities that strengthen the body and stimulate the mind to form a solid foundation that can lead to success and everything they put their minds to.
The next time you take your children to the park, instead of standing back and watching, go sliding down the slides with them, use the playground equipment as an obstacle course, swing across the monkey bars and just let yourself have some fun! It’s amazing how refreshing it can be to let go of the stress and just play with your children while creating new memories that you can all reflect on. Not only is playing on commercial playgrounds fun for you, but your children have much more fun when you participate with them.
Commercial playground equipment is not designed to eliminate every obstacle; it is designed to place reasonable obstacles in the path of children so that they can learn how to overcome these scenarios while interacting with other children. Children become more comfortable with social interactions, sharing, free -play, using their imaginations, physical fitness and much more. Take your children to the park every day and watch the positive impact this time has on their development.
If you are looking for more information about playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529)… Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Tags: A+ Playgrounds, aplusplaygrounds, commercial playground equipment, monkey bars, playground equipment, swing, swings Posted in Uncategorized | 13 Comments »
Wednesday, December 30th, 2009
These Touch Screen Games are perfect for all types of businesses, where kids get bored and want something to do. Make waiting fun! All of these touch-screen terminals come with our fun and educational set of games. Browse our list of products and choose those that best fit your needs. Perfect for restaurants, medical offices, retail stores, car dealerships, malls, day cares, churches, etc.
If you are looking for more information about touch screen games, playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529)… Nationwide Sales and Installs. Thanks!
Tags: A+ Playgrounds, aplusplaygrounds, church, commercial playground equipment, daycare, games, playground, playgrounds, swing, swings, touch screen games Posted in Company News | 60 Comments »
Wednesday, December 23rd, 2009
LEASING & FINANCING INFO FOR A+ PLAYGROUNDS
Here are four financing leasing/financing companies we have worked with in the past. All three companies work nationwide.
Harold Bailey – Account Manager
Forum Leasing
275 W. Campbell Rd – Ste 320
Richardson, TX 75080
Phone: 972-690-9444 x240
Fax 972-690-9464
harold@forumleasing.com
www.forumleasing.com
Matt Bortles – Account Manager
Lease Process
4251 Kipling St, Suite 425
Wheat Ridge, CO 80033
Toll Free: 800-942-9830 x224
Fax: 720-898-9200
Phone: 720-898-8100
mattb@leaseprocess.com
www.leaseprocess.com
John Kubat – Account Manager
Hampton Ridge Financial
348 W. Main St, Suite 203
Marshall, MN 56258
866-815-4448
866-803-1906 Fax
jon@hrfin.com
www.hamptonridgefinancial.com
Jennifer Delong – Account Manager
Navitas Lease Finance Corp
814 North Highway A1A, Suite 305
Ponte Vedra Beach, FL 32082
303-484-9374
877-628-4827 (corporate)
jendelong@navitaslease.com
www.navitaslease.com
Thanks and good luck with your project.
If you are looking for more information about playground equipment or surfacing, then feel free to visit www.Aplusplaygrounds.com or call 866-395-PLAY (7529)… Nationwide Sales and Installs.
Tags: A+ Playgrounds, aplusplaygrounds, commercial playground equipment, financing, leasing, playground equipment, swing, swings Posted in Company News | 11 Comments »
Monday, November 16th, 2009
Welcome to A+ Playgrounds. A+ Playgrounds supplies commercial playground equipment for indoor and outdoor play areas. Our Certified Playground Safety Inspectors (CPSI) can design and install a vast variety of structures, devices, accessories, and landscape treatments to provide kids with plenty of safe, enjoyable activities to help their minds and bodies grow.
Tags: commercial playground equipment, contained play, playground, playground equipment, playgrounds, slide, slides, soft play, swing, swing set, swing sets, swings Posted in Company News | 15 Comments »
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