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ДЕТСКАЯ ИГРУШКА В СОВРЕМЕННЫХ ПСИХОЛОГИЧЕСКИХ ИССЛЕДОВАНИЯХ

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Abstract

The article contains an overview of psychological and pedagogical research aimed at studying the preferences of toys by children, the influence of toys on children's development and child-parent interaction. Toy preferences can be determined by both biological and social factors. Of great interest is the study of gender preferences of toys, which are mainly explained by social influence: the same- age preferences of girls and boys are recorded only at preschool age. The study of the influence of toys on the interaction between parents and children shows that even the type of toy determines child-parent communication. Especially important is the data that playing with interactive toys leads to a decrease in the quantity and quality of interaction between adults and children; this is important information for specialists involved in the upbringing and development of young children. Studies aimed at studying the developmental potential of toys clearly prove that toys influence the activity and, consequently, the development of children, conditioning speech, expression, thinking, social and communicative competence.

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Sex differences in children's toy preferences are thought by many to arise from gender socialization. However, evidence from patients with endocrine disorders suggests that biological factors during early development (e.g., levels of androgens) are influential. In this study, we found that vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops sabaeus) show sex differences in toy preferences similar to those documented previously in children. The percent of contact time with toys typically preferred by boys (a car and a ball) was greater in male vervets (n=33) than in female vervets (n=30) (P
Article
Although previous research has explored the effects of various environmental influences on young children's play, the influence of toys has rarely been examined. This paucity of toy studies is due to a lack of a scientifically constructed observation system to evaluate the impact of play materials across developmental domains. The purpose of this study was to develop and test the reliability and validity of such an instrument. An eight-item, five-point rating system was constructed, based on previous toy research. To establish inter-rater reliability, two researchers independently used the instrument to rate the effects of 23 toys on the spontaneous play of 16 preschool children. There was a high level of agreement between observers (r = .81–.88, across items). A factor analysis was conducted to identify clusters of items that measure like dimensions of play effects; three distinct factors were identified: thinking/learning, creativity/imagination and social interaction. To establish validity, the instrument was used to rate five common toys that could be predicted, based on earlier work, to have distinct influences on play. The instrument was found to discriminate among these toys in ways that are consistent with previous research and that make theoretical sense. The uses of this instrument in both future research and classroom practice are discussed.
Article
Using a sequential touching procedure, we examined whether 18-month-olds could use different categorization strategies adaptively as a function of context. Infants were presented with test toys of land animals (quadrupeds), cars, and hybrids made by recombining car parts with animal parts. Infants who experienced a context emphasizing a taxonomic divide were subsequently more likely to form categories that reflected a taxonomic divide, whereas infants who experienced a context emphasizing a partonomic divide were subsequently more likely to form categories based on functional parts. These results suggest that 18-month-olds can adapt their categorization strategies flexibly in accordance with ambient contextual cues. This adds to the growing body of evidence that early categorization is flexible and not rigidly tied to characteristic features in the environment.
Article
Children as young as 18 months display sex-stereotyped toy choices. The present study was designed to determine whether parents encourage involvement with sex-stereotyped toys or avoidance of cross-sex-stereotyped toys and to determine whether masculine and feminine toys lead to different patterns of parent-child interaction, regardless of gender. 40 parent-toddler dyads were videotaped while playing with 6 different sets of sex-stereotyped toys. Equal numbers of boys and girls were observed with mothers and fathers. The children showed greater involvement when playing with same-sex-typed toys than with cross-sex toys even when statistically controlling for parents' behaviors. Parents' verbal behaviors, involvement, and proximity to the child differed across toy groups, regardless of the parent's or child's gender. Parents' initial nonverbal responses to the toys, however, were more positive when the toys were stereotyped for the child's and parent's gender than when they were not.
Article
This paper reports 2 studies that explore the role of joint attentional processes in the child's acquisition of language. In the first study, 24 children were videotaped at 15 and 21 months of age in naturalistic interaction with their mothers. Episodes of joint attentional focus between mother and child--for example, joint play with an object--were identified. Inside, as opposed to outside, these episodes both mothers and children produced more utterances, mothers used shorter sentences and more comments, and dyads engaged in longer conversations. Inside joint episodes maternal references to objects that were already the child's focus of attention were positively correlated with the child's vocabulary at 21 months, while object references that attempted to redirect the child's attention were negatively correlated. No measures from outside these episodes related to child language. In an experimental study, an adult attempted to teach novel words to 10 17-month-old children. Words referring to objects on which the child's attention was already focused were learned better than words presented in an attempt to redirect the child's attentional focus.
Роль социального опыта в игре детей раннего и дошкольного возраста // Вопр. психол. 1984. № 6. С. 38-42
  • Е М Гаспарова
Гаспарова Е.М. Роль социального опыта в игре детей раннего и дошкольного возраста // Вопр. психол. 1984. № 6. С. 38-42. URL: http://www. voppsy.ru/issues/1984/846/846038.htm
Ролевое замещение дошкольников в игре с образными игрушками // Психол. наука и образов
  • И А Рябкова
  • Е Г Шеина
Рябкова И.А., Шеина Е.Г. Ролевое замещение дошкольников в игре с образными игрушками // Психол. наука и образов. 2021. Т. 26 (1). С. 41-50. doi:10.17759/pse.2021260102
Образная игрушка как средство развития сознания // Психол. наука и образов
  • Е О Смирнова
  • И В Филиппова
Смирнова Е.О., Филиппова И.В. Образная игрушка как средство развития сознания // Психол. наука и образов. 2008. № 3. С. 62-71.
Imagination, playfulness, and creativity in children's play with different toys // Amer
  • S J Møller
Møller S.J. Imagination, playfulness, and creativity in children's play with different toys // Amer. J. Play. 2015. V. 7 (3). P. 322-346. URL: https:// www.journalofplay.org/sites/www.journalofplay. org/files/pdf-articles/7-3-article-imaginationplayfulness-and-creativity.pdf
Rol' sotsial'nogo opyta v igre detei rannego i doshkol'nogo vozrasta [The role of social experience in play of toddlers and preschool children
  • E M Gasparova
Gasparova E.M. Rol' sotsial'nogo opyta v igre detei rannego i doshkol'nogo vozrasta [The role of social experience in play of toddlers and preschool children] // Voprosy psykhologii. 1984. N 6. P. 38-42. URL: http://www.voppsy.ru/ issues/1984/846/846038.htm
Obraznaya igrushka kak sredstvo razvitiya soznaniya
  • E O Smirnova
  • I V Filippova
Smirnova E.O., Filippova I.V. Obraznaya igrushka kak sredstvo razvitiya soznaniya [Character toy as consciousness development tool of a preschool child] // Psikhol. nauka i obrazov. 2008. N 3. P. 62-71.