What do we know about pretend play and narrative development? a response to Lillard, Lerner, Hopkins, Dore, Smith, and Palmquist on "the impact of pretend play on children's development: a review of the evidence"

Date

2013

Authors

Nicolopoulou, A.
Ilgaz, H.

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Source Title

American Journal of Play

Print ISSN

1938-0399

Electronic ISSN

1938-0402

Publisher

The Strong

Volume

6

Issue

1

Pages

55 - 81

Language

English

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Abstract

An article by Angeline S. Lillard and others in the January 2013 issue of Psychological Bulletin comprehensively reviewed and criticized the existing body of research on pretend play and children’s development. Nicolopoulou and Ilgaz respond specifically to the article’s critical review of research on play and narrative development, focusing especially on its assessment of research—mostly conducted during the 1970s and 1980s—on play-based narrative interventions. The authors consider that assessment overly negative and dismissive. On the contrary, they find this research strong and valuable, offering some solid evidence of beneficial effects of pretend play for narrative development. They argue that the account of this research by Lillard and her colleagues was incomplete and misleading; that their treatment of relevant studies failed to situate them in the context of a developing research program; and that a number of their criticisms were misplaced, overstated, conceptually problematic, or all of the above. They conclude that this research—while not without flaws, gaps, limitations, unanswered questions, and room for improvement—offers more useful resources and guidance for future research than Lillard and her colleagues acknowledged.

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Published Version (Please cite this version)