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Stories, Pictures and Reality follows two children as they work out
the reality status of stories and pictures, with a daily
parent-observer record from the birth of the first child until the
second is eight, a span of eleven years in all. Together these
children pick through the meaning of stories and the motivations of
the characters they discover in this unique first-hand description
of the discernment that children bring to books from an early age,
full of revealing quotes that tell us a great deal about the
cognitive development of our young readers: "It's a joke 'cause it
couldn't really have happened", "I'll tell you what's pretend:
Batman, Robin, Superman, pirates, cowboys and Indians". "Pussy cats
don't fly kites!", "The man who drawed it was wrong". In analysis
this longitudinal study shows that children have more insight and
understanding than they are often given credit for and that they
approach subjects that puzzle the most sophisticated of thinkers
with an elegant simplicity beyond the expectations of conventional
psychologists and children's literature commentators. This book
urges readers, especially practitioners and academics, to afford
greater respect to what young children are capable of in this area.
Stories, Pictures and Reality follows two children as they work out
the reality status of stories and pictures, with a daily
parent-observer record from the birth of the first child until the
second is eight, a span of eleven years in all. Together these
children pick through the meaning of stories and the motivations of
the characters they discover in this unique first-hand description
of the discernment that children bring to books from an early age,
full of revealing quotes that tell us a great deal about the
cognitive development of our young readers: "It's a joke 'cause it
couldn't really have happened", "I'll tell you what's pretend:
Batman, Robin, Superman, pirates, cowboys and Indians". "Pussy cats
don't fly kites!", "The man who drawed it was wrong". In analysis
this longitudinal study shows that children have more insight and
understanding than they are often given credit for and that they
approach subjects that puzzle the most sophisticated of thinkers
with an elegant simplicity beyond the expectations of conventional
psychologists and children's literature commentators. This book
urges readers, especially practitioners and academics, to afford
greater respect to what young children are capable of in this area.
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