George Mason University, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA.
George Mason University, Fairfax, VA 22030, USA.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2022 Jan;213:105275. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2021.105275. Epub 2021 Sep 3.
Preschool-aged children can learn from fictional, pretend, and imaginative activities. However, many studies showing this learning involve children as physically passive while consuming fictional narratives rather than as actively, physically engaged. Physical engagement may add to cognitive processes already at play when watching narratives, making children more likely to retain or understand information. Children's natural pretend involves physical movement, role play, and embodiment. To test learning from embodied pretense, we conducted two studies in which we experimentally manipulated whether children were physically passive while consuming narratives or physically actively engaged with them through embodied pretend play using puppets or costumes. In Study 1, children were shown/engaged in television-based narratives, all of which contained fantastical content. In Study 2, children were shown/engaged in lab-created stories, some of which contained fantastical elements. We measured children's learning and perceptions of realism. In Study 1, neither perception of fictionality nor embodiment immediately affected learning, although older preschoolers learned more than younger preschoolers. In Study 2, neither perception nor presence of fantastical content affected learning, but embodiment did. Children learned more from both embodied conditions compared with the physically passive condition. We also included 2-week follow-up tests of recall and found that although children retained very little, embodiment still affected retention in both studies. Overall, children did not use realism judgments to differentiate learning. These findings show the complexity of different elements involved in children's learning from pretense and the need to understand what elements affect learning from fantastical and embodied pretend play and stories.
学龄前儿童可以从虚构、假装和想象的活动中学习。然而,许多表明这种学习的研究都表明,儿童在观看虚构叙事时处于身体被动状态,而不是积极主动地参与其中。身体参与可能会增加观看叙事时已经在进行的认知过程,从而使儿童更有可能保留或理解信息。儿童天生的假装包括身体动作、角色扮演和体现。为了测试从体现的假装中学习,我们进行了两项研究,在这两项研究中,我们通过使用木偶或服装进行体现的假装游戏,实验性地操纵儿童在观看叙事时是身体被动还是身体积极参与。在研究 1 中,儿童观看/参与基于电视的叙事,这些叙事都包含奇幻内容。在研究 2 中,儿童观看/参与实验室创作的故事,其中一些包含奇幻元素。我们衡量了儿童的学习和对现实感的看法。在研究 1 中,无论是对虚构的感知还是体现都没有立即影响学习,尽管年龄较大的学龄前儿童比年龄较小的学龄前儿童学习得更多。在研究 2 中,无论是感知还是奇幻内容的存在都没有影响学习,但体现确实有影响。与身体被动状态相比,儿童从两种体现状态中学习更多。我们还包括了 2 周后的回忆测试,发现尽管儿童保留的内容很少,但在这两项研究中,体现仍然影响保留。总的来说,儿童并没有使用现实感判断来区分学习。这些发现表明,儿童从假装中学习涉及到不同元素的复杂性,需要了解哪些元素影响从奇幻和体现的假装游戏和故事中学习。