| Literature DB >> 29467690 |
Gabrielle A Strouse1, Angela Nyhout2, Patricia A Ganea2.
Abstract
Picture books are an important source of new language, concepts, and lessons for young children. A large body of research has documented the nature of parent-child interactions during shared book reading. A new body of research has begun to investigate the features of picture books that support children's learning and transfer of that information to the real world. In this paper, we discuss how children's symbolic development, analogical reasoning, and reasoning about fantasy may constrain their ability to take away content information from picture books. We then review the nascent body of findings that has focused on the impact of picture book features on children's learning and transfer of words and letters, science concepts, problem solutions, and morals from picture books. In each domain of learning we discuss how children's development may interact with book features to impact their learning. We conclude that children's ability to learn and transfer content from picture books can be disrupted by some book features and research should directly examine the interaction between children's developing abilities and book characteristics on children's learning.Entities:
Keywords: analogical reasoning; fantasy distinction; learning; picture books; symbolic development; transfer
Year: 2018 PMID: 29467690 PMCID: PMC5807901 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Summary of book features' impact on learning and transfer in each learning domain.
| Ganea et al., | No studies | No studies | Simcock and DeLoache, | No studies | |
| Tare et al., | Tare et al., | No studies | No studies | No studies | |
| Weisberg et al., | Walker et al., | Ganea et al., | Richert et al., | No studies | |
| No studies | Ganea et al., | No studies | No studies | Larsen et al., | |
| No studies | No studies | Venkadasalam and Ganea, | No studies | No studies |