When representation becomes reality: Interactive digital media and symbolic development

Publication date: Available online 23 January 2019Source: Advances in Child Development and BehaviorAuthor(s): Georgene L. Troseth, Israel Flores, Zachary D. StuckelmanAbstractOne challenge of using an interesting object such as a scale model as a symbol for something else is children's deep interest in the object itself. Attending to the model (the symbol) as a toy, children do not use information about where in the model a tiny dog is hiding to mentally represent where a larger dog is hiding in the full-sized room (the referent). Young children use pictures in this way because they are relatively uninteresting as objects. Today, interactive images on touchscreens function as virtual objects on which to act and which respond to the user's actions. In this chapter, we examine how interactive symbolic media (e.g., touchscreens, video chat, augmented reality) might affect children's symbolic development and the way that psychologists think about representational objects. Young children's learning about and from interactive media may depend upon adults scaffolding children's use of these new cultural tools.
Source: Advances in Child Development and Behavior - Category: Child Development Source Type: research