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A Children’s Narrative Retells: The Influence of Character Realism and Storybook Theme on Central and Peripheral Detail

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A Children’s Narrative Retells: The Influence of Character Realism and Storybook Theme on Central and Peripheral Detail. / Russell, Samantha J; Cain, Kate; Wang, Jessica.
In: Early Education and Development, 21.01.2024.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Russell SJ, Cain K, Wang J. A Children’s Narrative Retells: The Influence of Character Realism and Storybook Theme on Central and Peripheral Detail. Early Education and Development. 2024 Jan 21. Epub 2024 Jan 21. doi: 10.1080/10409289.2024.2303908

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@article{3f95fc89066a4a1a9326c65427bd6d24,
title = "A Children{\textquoteright}s Narrative Retells: The Influence of Character Realism and Storybook Theme on Central and Peripheral Detail",
abstract = "Research FindingsAnthropomorphized animal characters have been associated with negative influences on educational outcomes for young children, for example story comprehension and prosocial learning from moral tales. In this study we investigate how character realism and moral theme influence young children{\textquoteright}s recall of the story content. Retells were examined for length, syntactic complexity, and centrality as indices of memory and understanding. Participants were 171 children (age 3-7 years) from 6 rural schools in the Northwest of England. We found no significant influence of story character on the measures under test. Retells with a prosocial sharing theme had higher syntactic complexity and greater centrality than those with a busy theme. Practice or PolicyThe results suggest that animal characters are not necessarily an impediment to coherent representations of stories. The central message from a prosocial themed story appeared to be more strongly retained than that of a closely matched story with no prosocial lesson. This suggests story theme to be a potential influence that should be considered when testing children{\textquoteright}s narrative comprehension.",
author = "Russell, {Samantha J} and Kate Cain and Jessica Wang",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "21",
doi = "10.1080/10409289.2024.2303908",
language = "English",
journal = "Early Education and Development",
issn = "1040-9289",
publisher = "Routledge",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A Children’s Narrative Retells

T2 - The Influence of Character Realism and Storybook Theme on Central and Peripheral Detail

AU - Russell, Samantha J

AU - Cain, Kate

AU - Wang, Jessica

PY - 2024/1/21

Y1 - 2024/1/21

N2 - Research FindingsAnthropomorphized animal characters have been associated with negative influences on educational outcomes for young children, for example story comprehension and prosocial learning from moral tales. In this study we investigate how character realism and moral theme influence young children’s recall of the story content. Retells were examined for length, syntactic complexity, and centrality as indices of memory and understanding. Participants were 171 children (age 3-7 years) from 6 rural schools in the Northwest of England. We found no significant influence of story character on the measures under test. Retells with a prosocial sharing theme had higher syntactic complexity and greater centrality than those with a busy theme. Practice or PolicyThe results suggest that animal characters are not necessarily an impediment to coherent representations of stories. The central message from a prosocial themed story appeared to be more strongly retained than that of a closely matched story with no prosocial lesson. This suggests story theme to be a potential influence that should be considered when testing children’s narrative comprehension.

AB - Research FindingsAnthropomorphized animal characters have been associated with negative influences on educational outcomes for young children, for example story comprehension and prosocial learning from moral tales. In this study we investigate how character realism and moral theme influence young children’s recall of the story content. Retells were examined for length, syntactic complexity, and centrality as indices of memory and understanding. Participants were 171 children (age 3-7 years) from 6 rural schools in the Northwest of England. We found no significant influence of story character on the measures under test. Retells with a prosocial sharing theme had higher syntactic complexity and greater centrality than those with a busy theme. Practice or PolicyThe results suggest that animal characters are not necessarily an impediment to coherent representations of stories. The central message from a prosocial themed story appeared to be more strongly retained than that of a closely matched story with no prosocial lesson. This suggests story theme to be a potential influence that should be considered when testing children’s narrative comprehension.

U2 - 10.1080/10409289.2024.2303908

DO - 10.1080/10409289.2024.2303908

M3 - Journal article

JO - Early Education and Development

JF - Early Education and Development

SN - 1040-9289

ER -