scholarly journals Engaging Children in Reading Jataka Reliefs of Borobudur Temple in Indonesia through Digital Picture Book

Author(s):  
Maria Karina Putri ◽  
Riama Maslan Sihombing ◽  
Dianing Ratri
Keyword(s):  
AERA Open ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. 233285842110638
Author(s):  
Adriana G. Bus ◽  
Rosalie Anstadt

The study tests the efficacy of a new sort of digital picture book. It includes camera movements to guide children’s visual attention through the pictures and the possibility to control page-turning and the pace at which the camera moves through pictures. There were 56 participants (Mage = 60.34 months, SD = 6.24) randomly assigned to three conditions: still images, camera movements (no control over pace), and camera movements (control over pace). For the 50% of children least proficient in language skills, sparingly adding well-chosen camera movements to the illustrations helps children understand the story. In addition, the camera movements’ effect can be enhanced by enabling control over the pace at which new information appears. Particularly the 50% low-language proficiency children benefited from camera movements and spending more time processing information.


2015 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 204-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Arisa Maeda ◽  
Hiroki Uema ◽  
Nanae Shirozu ◽  
Mitsunori Matsushita
Keyword(s):  

2019 ◽  
Vol 3 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 168-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vivien Heller

This paper is concerned with embodied processes of joint imagination in young children’s narrative interactions. Based on Karl Bühler’s notion of ‘deixis in the imagination’, it examines in detail how a 19-month-old German-speaking child, engaged in picture book reading with his mother, brings about different subtypes of deixis in the imagination by either ‘displacing’ what is absent into the given order of perception (e.g. by using the hand as a token for an object) or displacing his origo to an imagined space (e.g. by kinaesthetically aligning his body with an imagined body and animating his movements). Drawing on multimodal analysis and the concept of layering in interaction, the study analyses the ways in which the picture book as well as deictic, depictive, vocal and lexical resources are coordinated to evoke a narrative space, co-enact the storybook character’s experiences and produce reciprocal affect displays. Findings demonstrate that different types of displacement are in play quite early in childhood; displacements in the dimension of space and person are produced through layerings of spaces, voices and bodies.


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