Accio Knowledge: Children's Knowledge Acquisition in the Domain of Harry Potter

被引:0
|
作者
Galotti, Kathleen M. [1 ]
Hauge, Katharine L. [1 ]
Leppink-Shands, Chris [1 ]
Umscheid, Valerie A. [1 ]
Villanueva, Jed [1 ]
机构
[1] Carleton Coll, Northfield, MN 55057 USA
来源
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY | 2022年 / 135卷 / 01期
关键词
children; cognitive development; domain knowledge; expertise; REPRESENTATION; EXPERTISE;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
We conducted a conceptual replication of Chi and Koeske (1983) and Gobbo and Chi's (1986) studies on children's knowledge acquisition. One hundred elementary school students (86 through 159 months of age, in school grades 1 through 7) were asked to recall information about Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, the first of the books in the Harry Potter series. A quantitative measure of expertise was derived by a summation of factor loadings that were drawn from a free response and trivia task and from the number of Harry Potter books and movies a child reported having read or watched. Different measures of expertise were strongly intercorrelated but were only moderately correlated with age or grade. Although there was a significant correlation between age or grade and knowledge acquisition and expertise, nearly every other measure that correlated with expertise maintained statistical significance, even when we controlled for age or grade. Furthermore, regardless of age or grade, children with higher knowledge acquisition and expertise scores sorted characters more cohesively, with more sophistication, and used more categories that require a deep understanding of the Harry Potter domain. These results reinforce the idea that expertise is an aspect of knowledge that can be separated from a child's level of cognitive development and is associated with a deeper and richer knowledge base.
引用
收藏
页码:97 / 108
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Acquisition of domain knowledge
    Yangarber, R
    INFORMATION EXTRACTION IN THE WEB ERA: NATURAL LANGUAGE COMMUNICATION FOR KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION AND INTELLIGENT INFORMATION AGENTS, 2003, 2700 : 1 - 28
  • [2] Knowledge acquisition and modeling in a technical knowledge domain
    Coffey, John W.
    Eskridge, Tom
    WMSCI 2005: 9th World Multi-Conference on Systemics, Cybernetics and Informatics, Vol 1, 2005, : 316 - 320
  • [3] Where's Harry? (Harry Potter)
    Seleck, LA
    NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, 2005, : 30 - 30
  • [4] Children's behavioral understanding of knowledge acquisition
    Esbensen, BM
    Taylor, M
    Stoess, C
    COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT, 1997, 12 (01) : 53 - 84
  • [5] THE ACQUISITION AND REPRESENTATION OF DOMAIN KNOWLEDGE
    DAVIS, TA
    LIU, SP
    REDDY, R
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 1989 SUMMER COMPUTER SIMULATION CONFERENCE, 1989, : 585 - 589
  • [6] Knowledge Acquisition from Corresponding Domain Knowledge Transformations
    Armella, Michael
    Lombera, Isai Michel
    Rubin, Stuart H.
    Chen, Shu-Ching
    Lee, Gordon
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2009 IEEE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON INFORMATION REUSE AND INTEGRATION, 2008, : 175 - +
  • [7] DOMAIN-DRIVEN KNOWLEDGE MODELING FOR KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION
    NWANA, HS
    BENCHCAPON, TJM
    PATON, RC
    SHAVE, MJR
    KNOWLEDGE ACQUISITION, 1994, 6 (03): : 243 - 270
  • [8] Where's Harry? (Harry Potter) - Reply
    不详
    NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, 2005, : 30 - 30
  • [9] What has Harry Potter Done for Me? Children's Reflections on their 'Potter Experience'
    Dempster, Steve
    Oliver, Alice
    Sunderland, Jane
    Thistlethwaite, Joanne
    CHILDRENS LITERATURE IN EDUCATION, 2016, 47 (03) : 267 - 282
  • [10] What has Harry Potter Done for Me? Children’s Reflections on their ‘Potter Experience’
    Steve Dempster
    Alice Oliver
    Jane Sunderland
    Joanne Thistlethwaite
    Children's Literature in Education, 2016, 47 : 267 - 282