Children retelling stories. Responding, reshaping, and remembering in early childhood education and care
Abstract
Oral storytelling is a prevalent cultural practice for sense-making. Through stories, people get to know themselves, others, and the world around them. Children are introduced to this practice at home and in early childhood education and care (ECEC).
The present research concerns oral retelling in a Swedish preschool setting. Its overarching interest is how children orally retell stories they have been told. More specifically, how processes of responding, remembering, and reshaping unfold in children’s retelling activities are of analytical interest. The thesis consists of three empirical studies involving children aged three to five years. The analytical focus of Study I is on whether, and if so how, the children consider the understanding of the listener(s) when retelling stories. The analytical focus of Study II is on how the children remember, and reshape, stories in retelling activities. The analytical focus of Study III is on how the children indicate the intellectual and emotional states of fictional characters when they retell stories.
The theoretical framework informing these studies is a sociocultural perspective, conceptualizing communication, learning, and remembering as contingent on cultural tools and practices.
The empirical data consist of 21 video recordings of storytelling activities. Analytical work was guided by the principles of Interaction Analysis. Analysis of the meta-markers children use in their storytelling reveals that they do take into account the understanding of their listener(s) when retelling stories, if not consistently so (Study I). An analysis of how one focus child retells the same story in different constellations shows how she remembers details from the story told by the teacher and the very manner of how it was told and how she transforms the story into what more readily makes sense to her (Study II). Finally, the findings clarify how the children indicate the intellectual and emotional states of the characters in the stories they retell. They do this in three ways: through explicating (mental state terms); gesturing and facial expressions; and sound symbolism (Study III).
The thesis has significance for our understanding of children, their storytelling, responding, remembering, and processes of reshaping. The findings here contribute to a more general reconceptualization of children’s capacities to understand. The thesis has implications for early childhood education and care as a socially just practice, valuing all the communicative means children use.
Parts of work
Pihl, A., Peterson, L., & Pramling, N. (2017). Children’s re-storying as a responsive practice. In S. Garvis & N. Pramling (Eds.), Narratives in early childhood education: Communication, sense making and lived experience (pp. 89–101). Routledge. http://doi.org/10.4324/9781315640549 Pihl, A., Peterson, L., & Pramling, N. (2018). Children remembering and reshaping stories in retelling. Journal of Early Childhood Education Research, 7(1), 127–146. Pihl, A., Peterson, L., & Pramling, N. In press. Indicating intellectual and emotional states in narrating: Sound symbolism, gesturing and explicating practices in children’s oral storytelling. Research on Children and Social Interaction.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education, Communication and Learning ; Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Disputation
Fredagen den 9 december 2022 kl.13 BE 015, Pedagogen, Göteborgs universitet
Date of defence
2022-12-09
agneta.pihl@gu.se
Date
2022-11-14Author
Pihl, Agneta
Keywords
children, oral retelling, responsiveness, remembering, reshaping, preschool, sociocultural perspective
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7963-117-8 (printed)
978-91-7963-118-5 (pdf)
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences/ 473
Language
eng