Author:
EATON JUDY H.,COLLIS GLYN M.,LEWIS VICKY A.
Abstract
Children's narratives consist of event clauses and contextualizing or
‘evaluative’ clauses. Bamberg & Damrad-Frye (1991) and Bamberg
(1994) claimed that young children make limited use of evaluative
clauses because they are less able to adopt a global perspective on the
narrative. In an earlier study, Karmiloff-Smith (1985) demonstrated
that the narratives of younger children have coherence only at a local
level. However, Wellman & Bartsch (1988) showed that young children
could produce evaluative-like causal explanations if given a specific
prompt. The present study on 160 young children aged five, seven, nine
and eleven years examined their production of evaluatives in narratives
of a story presented as a video sequence with no spoken dialogue, to
ensure that the children's production was not simply a re-working of
verbal input. Results indicated that prompts greatly facilitated children's
production of evaluatives and that they could adopt a global perspective
on the story when formulating evaluatives.These results indicate that limitations in the narratives of young
children are more plausibly explained by contextual factors influencing
language production and by constraints on working memory than by
children's presumed lack of understanding of the structure of events or
their inferences about the minds of the characters.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
General Psychology,Linguistics and Language,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Language and Linguistics
Cited by
53 articles.
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