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Collaborative pedagogy: 3-year-olds bring pedagogical cues into alignment with analogical reasoning to extract generic knowledge

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Abstract

Although there is wide evidence on young children’s category learning, questions concerning how cognitive mechanisms and social mediation work collaboratively in this process remain sparse. Here, we study the impact of pedagogy in young children’s categorization of novel artifacts. A before-and-after micro-genetic study compared 58 3-year-old children’s performance in four learning scenarios which varied in the way category information—the artifact function—was provided: (a) in one single pedagogical demonstration, (b) in several guided pedagogical demonstrations aimed at eliciting analogies and inductions, or (c) employing analogies and inductions, but not in a guided pedagogical way. Results showed that children detected the function as the central conceptual property of the novel artifact only if the information was transmitted analogically (but not inductively) in several pedagogical demonstrations contingent with children categorization performance. These findings expand the role of pedagogy in categorization at an early age, showing that pedagogical cues act in concert with certain inferential learning mechanisms helping children extract generic knowledge.

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Acknowledgments

We wish to thank the pre-schools and children that participated in this study.

Funding

This research was supported by grants from the Agencia Nacional de Promoción Científica y Tecnológica (ANPCyT)-PICT 2248 and from the Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET)-PIP 0876, awarded to the last author.

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Correspondence to Andrea S. Taverna.

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Taverna, A.S., Padilla, M.I., Baiocchi, M.C. et al. Collaborative pedagogy: 3-year-olds bring pedagogical cues into alignment with analogical reasoning to extract generic knowledge. Eur J Psychol Educ 36, 423–438 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10212-020-00475-4

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10212-020-00475-4

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