I found that Marengo Elementary School has formal guidelines and rules that apply not only to tag but to all kinds of playground activities. Additionally, Marengo isn’t alone in giving tag and other rough-and-tumble games a time out—games such as tag and touch football are being banned across the nation. One rule that prevents my son and his friends from playing tag is “chasing of any kind will not be permitted anywhere on the playground.” This restricts kids from playing the kinds of active games that elementary school kids gravitate to naturally. Even for permitted activities, there are pretty detailed protocols in place. Here are some rules related to swings: 1) A person must pump himself/herself—no pushing. 2) One person at a time on each swing. 3) Lineup spot: Walk in front on the blacktop and then to the swing. 4) Sit down on the swing facing the office, and start counting. 5) Twenty swings equals one turn. (Up and back counts as one swing.) There are also detailed rules for using the play structures as well as playing games such as soccer, basketball, foursquare, handball, kickball and tetherball. There are even rules for waiting in line and the specificity of these rules is particularly interesting. They specify how many players may play at any one time and how disputes are to be arbitrated (the “judge” is the player who is first in line). They also specify (by grade level) the playing time for each game and where to sit or stand while waiting in line. These rules do help kids manage themselves with less adult intervention, but I can’t help wonder whether it’s a good thing to impose so many rules—particularly during one of the few periods when children have the opportunity for “free” play. School administrators feel that rough play causes disputes and injuries, and there is likely a substantial administrative burden on the school from handling not only those kinds of disputes and injuries but also the injured self-esteem of weaker and slower children who consistently come up short during the chase. Those administrative burdens start to have a real effect when school staffs are cut to the bone. I suspect another big reason for the ban on chase games is the potential for lawsuits from parents with injured children. “We don’t have district-wide rules about which games can be played on the playground,“ said South Pasadena Unified School District Superintendent Joel Shapiro. "Our overarching goal is to make sure that all students can play in a safe environment.” Shapiro went on to say that each school has unique circumstances, such as playground size and configuration, the placement of equipment, the number of students at recess, pathways of student travel and the number of adult supervisors. As a result, “the principal and staff at each school decides which games are safe at their site,” he said. In terms of tag, Shapiro said it can be dangerous if there’s not enough room to contain the game in its own area. Also, a game like tag doesn’t have rules to control the extent of physical contact. Teachers often notice that tagging turns into pushing, and injuries start to increase. For these reasons, a school might decide that it’s not safe.