English Expressive Narrative Skill Matters for Sociodramatic Play in Classrooms with Multiple Home Languages Represented

Author(s):  
Caitlin Malloy
2020 ◽  
pp. 53-70
Author(s):  
Larry R. Churchill

The four skills for ethics described in this chapter are imaginative skill, the ability to expand the reach of our empathy to include a wider range of people; assertive skill, the need to finally choose from among the competing values the ones we will embrace and live by; connective skill, that is, linking goodness with happiness—the kind of personal flourishing not available through fame and fortune; and narrative skill, which is our ability to tell true stories about ourselves and others. One key ingredient in narrative capacity is the ability to see that people intersect at different points at their life trajectories and with different moral concerns. The ethics of narration is the effort to tell truthful stories about these complex events.


2016 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-73 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoojin Chae ◽  
Sarah Kulkofsky ◽  
Francisco Debaran ◽  
Qi Wang ◽  
Sybil L. Hart

2019 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. 227-242
Author(s):  
Shelley Stagg Peterson ◽  
Soon Young Jang ◽  
Christina Tjandra

In this study, analysis of video recordings of 5-year-old children’s use of language and nonverbal modes of communication (e.g. gaze, action, gesture, and proximity) is used to examine how children contribute to sociodramatic play narratives and participate in the classroom peer culture. In their dramatic play at a restaurant play center and at a grocery store dramatic play center, eight focus children took up narrative playwright roles, where they contributed to the narrative of the dramatic play, mainly by expressing their own needs and by making connections or providing information to their peers. Children took up intervening playwright roles, in which they changed the direction of the narrative, changed or suggested a change of role, or assigned a new role to an object, most frequently by expressing desires or by providing new information. Dramatic play provided an authentic context for the children to try out various social strategies and to observe how others responded to their efforts, in order to position themselves in desirable ways within the classroom social network. Children took up powerful roles through frequency of participation and through directing others’ actions and maintaining the use of desired objects when continuing the play narrative by taking up narrative playwright roles. In addition, they used humor and made imaginative suggestions for roles and plots when taking up intervening playwright roles where they introduced new characters, roles for objects, and plots. Our research provides examples of peers teaching each other in dramatic play through the responses they give to each other and through modeling social approaches that allow them to fulfill desired social purposes and take up powerful social roles in the peer network.


1994 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allyssa McCabe ◽  
Pamela Rosenthal Rollins

The assessment of discourse skills in young children is an important responsibility facing clinicians today. Early identification of problems in discourse skills and, more specifically, narrative abilities is especially important for identifying children at risk for later learning and literacy-related difficulties. Despite this, few tools are available for assessing narrative skills in preschoolers. In this article we provide information concerning preschool narrative development in typically developing, North American, Caucasian, English-speaking children. Methods are suggested for assessing narrative skill of children with language impairment and children developing language normally. Transcripts of narratives from these children are presented, along with specific recommendations for evaluating these narratives.


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