Exploring John Dewey's hopes for play reveals much about the key role he thought it played in education in a democratic society. Placing Democracy and Education in the context of Progressive Era controversies over play in the kindergarten movement and preschool education illustrates Dewey's view that teacher-guided free play could reconcile the dilemma of the need for individual agency and social discipline. Dewey built upon and critiqued the scripted play pedagogy of kindergarten founder Friedrich Froebel. Drawing in part from progressive kindergarten teachers, Dewey constructed his own notion of play that he argued fostered experiential learning, voluntary participation, and social order. For Dewey, play and work were naturally linked in ways in which the needs of the child and society coalesced. Analysis of sources from the kindergarten movement and the Sub-primary Department at the University of Chicago Laboratory School provide background for interpreting some of Dewey's writings on play, which influenced modern contests over how young children learn and should be taught.John Dewey had high hopes for play. He devoted a chapter in Democracy and Education to "Play and Work in the Curriculum" and praised some of German kindergarten founder Friedrich Froebel's views as "perhaps the most effective single force in modern educational theory in effecting widespread acknowledgment of the idea of growth." Writing about the University of Chicago Laboratory School, Dewey said that it endeavored "throughout its whole course … to carry into effect certain principles which Froebel was perhaps the first to consciously set forth." At the same time, Dewey criticized Froebel's scripted play activities for lacking opportunities for children to exercise free choice. Dewey did not advocate completely free play, however. He wanted children to experience a sense of free agency within a teacher-guided environment in which they learned the kind of voluntary self-control needed in a democratic society. Teacherguided free play, Dewey argued, could reconcile individual agency and social discipline, one of the central dilemmas of liberal democracy.