A language-based, three-stage, social-interactional model of social pretend play: Acquiring pretend as an epistemic operator, pretending that, and pretending with (the P–PT–PW model)

Publication date: Available online 16 June 2016 Source:Developmental Review Author(s): Rachel Karniol I present a language-based, social-interactional, three-stage model of pretend play in which the cornerstone is children's understanding of pretend as an epistemic operator that changes the truth value of others' utterances. First, children crack into language by comparing their own representations of reality with others' utterances regarding reality, and they acquire negation, irrealis, and pretend, epistemic operators that impact the truth value of others' utterances, with pretend (P) indicating transitions from truthfully-described worlds to fictional worlds, meaning that truth values are not to be applied to others' utterances. This sets the stage for children to create fictional worlds for themselves, with their understanding of the epistemic operator pretend forging with their ability to conduct thought transformations to yield pretend that (PT), first based on perceptually-coupled thought transformations that draw on perceptual similarity to transform physically-available objects, and later, based on perceptually-decoupled thought transformations that draw on long-term memory to create imaginary and mentalizing transformations. Next, in pretend with (PW), children use their emerging metarepresentational skills to engage in social pretend play, comparing their own representations of reality with those of others and creating mappings between others' representations...
Source: Developmental Review - Category: Child Development Source Type: research