Journal of Social Science and Human Research Studies (JSSHRS)
Indigenous Play-Based Learning and Cognitive Development in Early Childhood Education Across African Contexts
Lukong, Tani Emmanuel, Feh, Che Mary Lum
18 June 2026 · Vol. 2, Issue 6, pp. 790-799
DOI: 10.65150/EP-jsshrs/V2E6/2026-19
Abstract
Indigenous play-based learning constitutes a foundational yet under-theorized pedagogical resource within early childhood education (ECE) across African contexts. Rooted in African Indigenous Knowledge Systems (AIKS), such forms of play are not merely recreational activities but culturally structured modes of cognition through which children engage in meaning-making, problem-solving, and social learning. However, despite their epistemic richness and developmental relevance, indigenous play practices remain systematically marginalized within formal ECE frameworks that continue to privilege Eurocentric models of instruction and assessment. This article critically interrogates this paradox by examining the cognitive affordances of indigenous play-based learning while exposing the structural, ideological, and pedagogical tensions that constrain its integration into contemporary African classrooms. Drawing on sociocultural and constructivist theories of learning, particularly the works of Vygotsky (1978) and Piaget (1962), the article reconceptualizes indigenous play as a dynamic cognitive space where higher-order mental processes are cultivated through culturally meaningful interactions. Evidence from diverse African settings demonstrates that traditional play forms—including storytelling, rhythmic counting games, imitation of adult roles, and strategy-based games—serve as powerful mediational tools for the development of memory, language, executive functioning, and abstract reasoning. For instance, studies in Cameroon and Zambia reveal that indigenous games significantly enhance children’s problem-solving abilities and numeracy skills by embedding learning within familiar sociocultural contexts (Lukong & Mbuwir, 2024; Mwinsa, 2024). Notwithstanding these benefits, the article argues that the continued marginalization of indigenous play reflects deeper epistemological hierarchies that devalue local knowledge systems in favour of standardized, test-oriented pedagogies. Such hierarchies not only alienate learners from their cultural environments but also limit the cognitive potential of education by divorcing learning from lived experience. These challenges call for a critical rethinking of early childhood education in Africa one that moves beyond superficial inclusion of cultural elements toward a transformative integration of indigenous epistemologies. The article advances a contextually responsive pedagogical framework that positions indigenous play as a central rather than peripheral component of ECE. This framework emphasizes the co-construction of knowledge through community participation, the legitimization of indigenous knowledge as formal curriculum content, and the creative adaptation of traditional play within contemporary learning environments. Foregrounding examples from Cameroon, Kenya, South Africa, and Zambia, the study demonstrates that culturally grounded play-based pedagogies can foster not only cognitive development but also identity formation, resilience, and holistic learning. The article contends that re-centering indigenous play within early childhood education is both a pedagogical necessity and a decolonial imperative. It calls for deliberate policy reforms, teacher education programmes, and research agendas that recognize and harness the cognitive potential of indigenous play, thereby contributing to the development of more inclusive, contextually relevant, and intellectually empowering educational systems across Africa.
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Cite this article
Lukong, Tani Emmanuel, Feh, & Che Mary Lum (2026). Indigenous Play-Based Learning and Cognitive Development in Early Childhood Education Across African Contexts. Journal of Social Science and Human Research Studies, 2(6), 790-799. https://doi.org/10.65150/EP-jsshrs/V2E6/2026-19
@article{Lukong2026,
title = {Indigenous Play-Based Learning and Cognitive Development in Early Childhood Education Across African Contexts},
author = {Lukong and Tani Emmanuel and Feh and Che Mary Lum},
journal = {Journal of Social Science and Human Research Studies},
year = {2026},
volume = {2},
number = {6},
pages = {790-799},
doi = {10.65150/EP-jsshrs/V2E6/2026-19},
url = {https://doi.org/10.65150/EP-jsshrs/V2E6/2026-19}
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