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No guts, no glory: underestimating the benefits of providing children with mechanistic details

Psychology

No guts, no glory: underestimating the benefits of providing children with mechanistic details

A. Chuey, A. Mccarthy, et al.

This groundbreaking research reveals that children possess a remarkable ability to grasp complex mechanisms, particularly when exposed to the details of combustion engines. Conducted by Aaron Chuey, Amanda McCarthy, Kristi Lockhart, Emmanuel Trouche, Mark Sheskin, and Frank Keil, the study demonstrates that even brief exposure can enhance both concrete knowledge and abstract causal understandings, challenging long-held assumptions about children's learning capacities.... show more
Abstract
Previous research shows that children effectively extract and utilize causal information, yet we find that adults doubt children's ability to understand complex mechanisms. Since adults themselves struggle to explain how everyday objects work, why expect more from children? Although remembering details may prove difficult, we argue that exposure to mechanism benefits children via the formation of abstract causal knowledge that supports epistemic evaluation. We tested 240 6–9 year-olds' memory for concrete details and the ability to distinguish expertise before, immediately after, or a week after viewing a video about how combustion engines work. By around age 8, children who saw the video remembered mechanistic details and were better able to detect car-engine experts. Beyond detailed knowledge, the current results suggest that children also acquired an abstracted sense of how systems work that can facilitate epistemic reasoning.
Publisher
npj Science of Learning
Published On
Oct 22, 2021
Authors
Aaron Chuey, Amanda McCarthy, Kristi Lockhart, Emmanuel Trouche, Mark Sheskin, Frank Keil
Tags
children
learning
mechanisms
combustion engines
causal understanding
education
psychology
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