sexta-feira, 2 de maio de 2025

The connections between Jean Piaget’s pedagogy and theater


          Few names in the history of education carry the influence and legacy of Jean Piaget. The Swiss psychologist and epistemologist revolutionized our understanding of children’s cognitive development by showing that they are not passive receivers of information, but active builders of knowledge. What many may not know is how deeply his ideas intersect with the arts—especially with theater. This article invites you on an inspiring journey through these connections, revealing how Piagetian principles can be powerfully applied to the world of theater, particularly in early childhood education. Parents, educators, and artists alike will discover new paths to transform learning into a living, emotional, and creative experience.

According to Piaget, children go through cognitive development stages—from the sensorimotor to the formal operational stage—each marked by specific mental structures and ways of understanding the world. These stages are not rigid but dynamic, constructed through interaction between the child and their environment. This is precisely where theater emerges as an ideal educational tool: it offers a safe, playful, and symbolic space where children can explore roles, emotions, and situations that help them assimilate and accommodate new information. Pretend play, for instance, is far more than entertainment—it’s a powerful cognitive reorganizing process, as recent studies from Harvard University and the University of São Paulo on theater and cognition have demonstrated.

In theatrical play, children experience others' perspectives, expand their emotional vocabulary, and strengthen their symbolic thinking. Piaget emphasized symbolic language as one of the greatest achievements of the preoperational stage. When a child embodies a character, they are constructing meaning, processing experiences, and creating more complex mental structures. A practical example: when a child plays the role of a doctor, they grasp social roles, develop empathy, and expand their linguistic and emotional repertoire. It’s no wonder that innovative schools around the world—such as Reggio Emilia in Italy and Project Zero in the United States—have incorporated theater into the curriculum as an essential language of expression and knowledge construction.

Educator and writer Antônio Carlos dos Santos, a strong advocate of affective pedagogy and theater in childhood, reinforces this bridge between Piaget and the stage. In his extensive collection of children's literature and the methodologies he created—such as TBMB (Mané Beiçudo Puppet Theater), MAT (Mindset, Action, and Theater), and ThM (Theater Movement)—he demonstrates how theater can serve not only as art but also as a science of human development. In TBMB, for example, puppets represent everyday conflicts, inviting children to reflect on values, emotions, and solutions. The stories are designed based on Piaget’s cognitive development stages, respecting each age group’s capacity for comprehension and symbolic understanding.

MAT, on the other hand, is a methodology that integrates positive mindset, concrete action, and theater as a formative process. It allows children to move between imagination and reality, working through complex concepts using embodied and emotional experiences. This active experience aligns closely with Piaget’s idea that learning happens through action—“to understand is to invent or reconstruct by rediscovering.” When a child performs, they are not merely memorizing lines; they are internalizing concepts, reinterpreting life experiences, and developing essential executive functions such as working memory, cognitive flexibility, and self-regulation.

ThM (Theater Movement) focuses on expressive movement as a form of cognition. Through movement, the child gives meaning to the world. Piaget recognized the role of motor development as the foundation for cognitive growth. ThM brings this into contemporary understanding, showing that the body is both language and thought in motion. In children’s performances inspired by this approach, we witness kids solving spatial problems, building narratives through gesture, and expressing complex emotions without speaking a word—all of which are spontaneous, joyful, and deeply educational.

Beyond cognition, theater strengthens socio-emotional development, another area increasingly valued in modern education. Yale University’s Center for Emotional Intelligence emphasizes the importance of active methodologies that promote empathy, self-awareness, and social skills. Theater provides that emotional territory where mistakes are part of learning, where each child is heard and valued, and where diverse perspectives are welcomed. This resonates strongly with Piaget’s moral development theory, which saw cooperation and justice as foundations of ethical reasoning in children.

It’s worth noting how, throughout history, many educators and artists intuitively understood this connection. Maria Clara Machado, founder of Brazil’s modern children’s theater, used to say the stage was a classroom for the heart. Augusto Boal, creator of the Theater of the Oppressed, often spoke of theater’s transformative power. Both, without necessarily citing Piaget, affirmed that children learn not only through sight and sound, but through their entire being: body, emotion, imagination, and reason.

Parents and educators can take advantage of these connections in their daily lives. Organizing short dramatizations at home or at school, reading stories with intonation and expressiveness, creating puppets with recyclable materials and encouraging make-believe are simple, accessible and extremely effective practices. The children's literature of Antônio Carlos dos Santos is an excellent starting point; his works combine engaging narrative with psychological and pedagogical content, promoting the child's integral development.

Jean Piaget’s pedagogy and theater intertwine deeply, offering adults the chance to see childhood with renewed perspective—not as mere preparation for adulthood but as a rich, complex, and meaningful present. Theater, by giving shape to a child’s imagination and emotions, becomes a bridge to authentic knowledge—one that is built with the body, with affection, and with lived experience.

Let us, then, as parents, teachers, and artists, cherish these connections. Because, as Piaget said, “the principal goal of education is to create people who are capable of doing new things, not simply repeating what other generations have done.” And theater, when integrated with early childhood development, offers just that: the possibility of nurturing human beings who are creative, sensitive, cooperative—and profoundly human.

Access the books by Antônio Carlos dos Santos on amazon.com or amazon.com.br

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