biological knowledge harry purser [email protected]

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Biological Knowledge Harry Purser [email protected]

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Page 1: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Biological Knowledge

Harry Purser

[email protected]

Page 2: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Why is it useful to study children’s conception of biology?

• Help design classroom science• Aid in development of science-related museum

exhibits• Informs us about role of developmental theory • Contributes to knowledge of what children learn

from interactions with more advanced others

Page 3: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Points to consider

• What constitutes having a theory of biology?• What types of knowledge should children

have to demonstrate before being credited with such a theory?

• How do children acquire this theory?

Page 4: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Hatano and Inagaki (1994)

• Distinction between non-living and living things/mind and body

• Model of inference to predict attributes or behaviours of living things

• Non-intentional explanatory framework for behaviours relevant to biological processes

• Conceptual Devices

Page 5: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

• Distinction between living and non-living

Page 6: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Piaget (1929)

Stage

No understanding

Life based on activity Washing machine

Life based on movement Cars

Autonomous movement Clouds

Correct Animals and animals and plants

Page 7: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Living thingsINV: Max, can you tell me, is a cloud a living thing?CHI: Nope.INV: Why not?CHI: Because it doesn’t. Because it doesn’t walk.INV: Does a cloud breathe?CHI: No.INV: Does it feed?CHI: No.INV: Does it grow?CHI: No.INV: Is a person a living thing?CHI: What?INV: Is a person a living thing?INV: Like a person like you. Are you a living thing?CHI: Nods yes.INV: Yeah. Why?CHI: Because I breathe.INV: So people breathe?INV: Do people feed?INV: Do they grow?INV: What about a rock? Is a rock a living thing?CHI: No.INV: Why not?CHI: Because it doesn’t grow.

Page 8: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Hatano, Siegler, et al., 1993

• People• Other animals• Plants• Inanimate

• Being a living thing

Page 9: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Hatano, Siegler, et al., 1993

• Japan, US, Israel• K, 2, 4th graders

Page 10: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Hatano, Siegler, et al., 1993

• By K, most children know people and animals are alive

• 60% of Israeli 4th graders judge plants not be alive

• 8% of Japanese 4th graders think that inanimate objects are alive

Page 11: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

• Model of inference to predict attributes or behaviours of living things

Page 12: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Carey (1985)

• Comes from folk psychology• Psychological confusion (intentional causality

b/c ignorant of physiological mechanisms)• Death

Page 13: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Carey (1985)

• Projection task to other animals– Humans– Dogs

• 4 yr : people to dogs (75%)

• Dogs to people (20%)• 10 yr: Humans not

central

Page 14: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

• Nonintentional causal framework

Page 15: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Inagaki & Hatano (1993)

• Why do we take in air?– 4: Feel good (intentional)– 6: Chest takes in vital power from the air (vitalistic)– 8 and adults: Lungs take in oxygen and turn it into

carbon dioxide (mechanical)

Page 16: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Kelemen (1999)

• Teleogical thinking: objects and living things exist for a purpose

• Why did Cryptoclidus have a long neck? Why are rocks pointy?

• So that they wouldn’t get smashed• So that Cryptoclidus could scratch his neck• Because bits of stuff piled up on them for a

long time

Page 17: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Teleological Explanations

• Living things: adults and children use teleological reasoning for living things

• Natural Kinds: 7/8 yr children use teleological reasoning rather than physical-reductionist explanations for (non-living) natural kinds: ‘promiscuous teleology’

Page 18: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Johnson and Carey (1998)Predicted a dissociation between general knowledge of animals (e.g., number of legs, what it eats, where it lives) andcore folk-biological concepts (e.g., determinantsof species identity, the notion that humans areone animal of many).

WS = 12-yr-old TD, matched on language knowledge, on biological general knowledge

WS = 6-yr-old TD on folk-biological concepts

WS group had not acquired folk-biological conceptsappropriate for VMA, even though the requisite generalknowledge was probably in place: not just about knowledge!

Page 19: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

How do children develop theories in these core conceptual domains?

• Nativists (Spelke): they are innate

• Theory theory (Gopnik): children construct theories

• Socioculturalists (Callanan & Oakes): children learn from others

Page 20: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Early Theories: Core Cognitive Domains

Folk Psychology Folk Biology Folk Physics

Page 21: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Conceptual Categories

• Babies (7 months) treated plastic toy birds and airplanes, which are perceptually similar, as if they were members of the same category

• Babies (9 -11 months) treated toy airplanes and birds as members of conceptually different categories, despite the fact that they looked very much alike

Mandler & McDonough, 1993

Page 23: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Rosengren, Gelman, Kalish, & McCormick, 1991

This is my frog. What will it look like when it is an adult?

Page 24: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Rosengren, Gelman, Kalish, & McCormick, 1991

• This is my light bulb. If I kept it in a box for a long time, what would it look like?

Page 25: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Biology (Rosengren, Gelman, Kalish, & McCormick, 1991)

• Children as young as 3 picked bigger objects for animals

• More frequently than adults, 3 year olds picked picture of larger artifact

• 5 year olds resembled adults

Page 26: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Lack of conceptual devices: evolution

• Evans (2001)• How do things get here?• Spontaneous generation, evolution,

creationism

Page 27: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Trees

A long, long time ago there were no things on earth. Then there were the first trees ever. How do you think the first tree got here?

Page 28: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Trees

A) It came from someplace else.

B) God made it.C) It changed from a

different kind of plant that used to be on earth.

Page 29: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

What children said…

7: creationist and spontaneous generation> evolutionary

9: creationist> evolution11: equal creationism

and evolution

Page 30: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Body vs MindInagaki & Hatano (2002):

When playing with a child who has a cold and is coughing a lot, who is more likely to catch cold?Boy A - often hits and pinches his friend on the back but eats a lot at meals every day

Boy B, who is a good friend but eats only a little?’’

5-year-olds choose boy B, weighting the biological/physical cue (e.g., insufficient nutrients) more heavily than the psychological/moral cue

Page 31: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Hood, Gjersoe & Bloom (2012)

- Demonstrate duplicating device

- Introduce hamster with 3 invisible physical properties (marble in stomach, blue heart, broken back tooth) and 3 mental states (tell it child's name, show a drawing by child, child tickles hamster)

- ‘Duplicate’ hamster

- Ask child whether duplicated hamster has these properties/states

Page 32: Biological Knowledge Harry Purser h.purser@kingston.ac.uk

Hood, Gjersoe & Bloom (2012)

- Much more likely to attribute same physical properties

- No such bias when a video-camera is duplicated

- Stronger bias when attention drawn to unique identity of the first hamster by giving it a name

- Notions of unique individuals and mind body dualism are present in 5-to-6-year-old children even though it is unlikely they have been explicitly tutored in these philosophical issues