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Preschoolers Prefer to Learn Causal Information

Overview
Journal Front Psychol
Date 2015 Mar 13
PMID 25762945
Citations 2
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Abstract

Young children, in general, appear to have a strong drive to explore the environment in ways that reveal its underlying causal structure. But are they really attuned specifically to casual information in this quest for understanding, or do they show equal interest in other types of non-obvious information about the world? To answer this question, we introduced 20 three-year-old children to two puppets who were anxious to tell the child about a set of novel artifacts and animals. One puppet consistently described causal properties of the items while the other puppet consistently described carefully matched non-causal properties of the same items. After a familiarization period in which children learned which type of information to expect from each informant, children were given the opportunity to choose which they wanted to hear describe each of eight pictured test items. On average, children chose to hear from the informant that provided causal descriptions on 72% of the trials. This preference for causal information has important implications for explaining the role of conceptual information in supporting early learning and may suggest means for maximizing interest and motivation in young children.

Citing Articles

Children's Preference for Causal Information in Storybooks.

Shavlik M, Bauer J, Booth A Front Psychol. 2020; 11:666.

PMID: 32351428 PMC: 7174774. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.00666.


Explain This, Explore That: A Study of Parent-Child Interaction in a Children's Museum.

Willard A, Busch J, Cullum K, Letourneau S, Sobel D, Callanan M Child Dev. 2019; 90(5):e598-e617.

PMID: 30866040 PMC: 6850333. DOI: 10.1111/cdev.13232.

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