Transfer of learning between 2D and 3D sources during infancy: Informing theory and practice

被引:152
作者
Barr, Rachel [1 ]
机构
[1] Georgetown Univ, Dept Psychol, Washington, DC 20057 USA
关键词
Transfer of learning; Television; Infants; Representational flexibility; Video deficit effect; AGE-RELATED-CHANGES; SUBSEQUENT ATTENTIONAL PROBLEMS; DELAYED VIDEO REPRESENTATION; YOUNG CHILDRENS ATTENTION; LONG-TERM-MEMORY; DEFERRED IMITATION; DEVELOPMENTAL-CHANGES; DECLARATIVE MEMORY; TELEVISION EXPOSURE; SELF-RECOGNITION;
D O I
10.1016/j.dr.2010.03.001
中图分类号
B844 [发展心理学(人类心理学)];
学科分类号
040202 ;
摘要
The ability to transfer learning across contexts is an adaptive skill that develops rapidly during early childhood. Learning from television is a specific instance of transfer of learning between a two-dimensional (2D) representation and a three-dimensional (3D) object. Understanding the conditions under which young children might accomplish this particular kind of transfer is important because by 2 years of age 90% of US children are viewing television on a daily basis. Recent research shows that children can imitate actions presented on television using the corresponding real-world objects, but this same research also shows that children learn less from television than they do from live demonstrations until they are at least 3 years old; termed the video deficit effect. At present, there is no coherent theory to account for the video deficit effect; how learning is disrupted by this change in context is poorly understood. The aims of the present review are: (1) to review the conditions under which children transfer learning between 2D images and 3D objects during early childhood and (2) to integrate developmental theories of memory processing into the transfer of learning from media literature using Hayne's (2004) developmental representational flexibility account. The review will conclude that studies on the transfer of learning between 2D and 3D sources have important theoretical implications for general developmental theories of cognitive development, and in particular the development of a flexible representational system, as well as policy implications for early education regarding the potential use and limitations of media as effective teaching tools during early childhood. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:128 / 154
页数:27
相关论文
共 197 条
[41]   Event-related potential (ERP) indices of infants' recognition of familiar and unfamiliar objects in two and three dimensions [J].
Carver, LJ ;
Meltzoff, AN ;
Dawson, G .
DEVELOPMENTAL SCIENCE, 2006, 9 (01) :51-62
[42]   Early television exposure and subsequent attentional problems in children [J].
Christakis, DA ;
Zimmerman, FJ ;
DiGiuseppe, DL ;
McCarty, CA .
PEDIATRICS, 2004, 113 (04) :708-713
[43]   The effects of infant media usage: what do we know and what should we learn? [J].
Christakis, Dimitri A. .
ACTA PAEDIATRICA, 2009, 98 (01) :8-16
[44]   Debating the Impact of Television and Video Material on Very Young Children: Attention, Learning, and the Developing Brain [J].
Courage, Mary L. ;
Setliff, Alissa E. .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVES, 2009, 3 (01) :72-78
[45]   Effects of repeated exposures to a single episode of the television program Blue's Clues on the viewing behaviors and comprehension of preschool children [J].
Crawley, AM ;
Anderson, DR ;
Wilder, A ;
Williams, M ;
Santomero, A .
JOURNAL OF EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1999, 91 (04) :630-637
[46]  
DeLoache J. S., 1991, CHILD DEV, V62, P83
[47]   PICTURE PERCEPTION IN INFANCY [J].
DELOACHE, JS ;
STRAUSS, MS ;
MAYNARD, J .
INFANT BEHAVIOR & DEVELOPMENT, 1979, 2 (01) :77-89
[48]   Transfer by very young children in the symbolic retrieval task [J].
DeLoache, JS ;
Simcock, G ;
Marzolf, DP .
CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 2004, 75 (06) :1708-1718
[49]   JOINT PICTUREBOOK INTERACTIONS OF MOTHERS AND 1-YEAR-OLD CHILDREN [J].
DELOACHE, JS ;
DEMENDOZA, OAP .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 1987, 5 :111-123
[50]   RAPID CHANGE IN THE SYMBOLIC FUNCTIONING OF VERY YOUNG-CHILDREN [J].
DELOACHE, JS .
SCIENCE, 1987, 238 (4833) :1556-1557