Knowing children : experiments in conversation and cognition

Bibliographic Information

Knowing children : experiments in conversation and cognition

Michael Siegal

(Essays in developmental psychology)

Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, c1991

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliography and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

It has been often maintained that young children's knowledge is limited to perceptual appearances; in the "preoperational" stage of development, there are profound conceptual limitations in that they have little understanding of numerical and causal relations and are incapable of insight into the minds of others. Their apparent inability to perform well on traditional developmental measures has led researchers to accept a model of the young child as plagued by conceptual deficits. These ideas have had a major impact on educational programmes. Many have either accepted the view that the young are not ready for instruction, especially in subjects such as mathematics and science. However, this collection of essays provides evidence that children's stage-like performance on the many tasks that have been used to demonstrate their limitations can be reinterpreted in terms of the language used in experiments. In many specialized experimental settings, children may inadvertently perceive adults' well-meaning questions as redundant, insincere, irrelevant, uninformative or ambiguous. Under these conditions, there is a clash between the conversational worlds of children and adults. Children do not share an experimenter's purpose in questioning and how his or her words are intended. They do not disclose the depth of their understanding and may respond to an experimenter's questions incorrectly even when they are certain of the right answer. In this light, a different model of development emerges. It proposes that young children have abstract knowledge that can be examined through attention to their conversational experience. The implications for instruction in subjects such as mathematics and science are significant.

Table of Contents

  • What children know before talking
  • models of development and developmental congitive science
  • object permanence
  • imitation of facial expressions
  • identification of voices and sounds
  • matching touch with vision
  • perception of number and causal relations
  • changing views of children's knowledge - a working model
  • experiments and language - conversation of number as a starting point
  • explanations for performance
  • towards the adjudication of alternative explanations
  • spontaneously deciding which one has more
  • recovering formerly obscured capacity in contemporary developmental research
  • detecting causality
  • causality, classification and conversation
  • children as young scientists
  • judgements of time
  • experiments on children's knowledge of health and illness
  • understanding contagion and contamination
  • representing objects and viewpoints
  • seeing and knowing
  • understanding the mental world
  • a "theory of mind" in the child
  • distinguishing between appearance and reality
  • children's testimony
  • understanding persons
  • the stage approach to children's concepts of friendship
  • rejected and non-rejected children
  • culture and knowledge
  • humour reputation
  • gender concepts
  • authority and academic skills
  • knowledge of rationales
  • children's theory of legitimate adult authority
  • parental involvement
  • individualized instruction in reading and number - some examples
  • authority as complacency?
  • models of knowledge
  • conversational rules for knowing children
  • are we tapping into a fraction of understanding?
  • the child in society.

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