Article

Gaze Aversion During Children's Transient Knowledge and Learning

Details

Citation

Doherty-Sneddon G, Phelps FG & Calderwood L (2009) Gaze Aversion During Children's Transient Knowledge and Learning. Cognition and Instruction, 27 (3), pp. 225-238. https://doi.org/10.1080/07370000903014329

Abstract
Looking away from an interlocutor’s face during demanding cognitive activity can help adults and children answer challenging mental arithmetic and verbal-reasoning questions (Glenberg, Schroeder, & Robertson, 1998; Phelps, Doherty-Sneddon, & Warnock, 2006). While such “gaze aversion” (GA) is used far less by 5-year old school children, its use increases dramatically during the first years of primary education, reaching adult levels by 8-years of age (Doherty-Sneddon, Bruce, Bonner, Longbotham, & Doyle, 2002). Furthermore GA increases with increasing mental demands, with high levels signalling that an individual finds material being discussed challenging but remains engaged with it (Doherty-Sneddon et al., 2002; Doherty-Sneddon & Phelps, 2006). In the current study we investigate whether patterns of gaze and gaze aversion during children’s explanations can predict when they are in states of transient knowledge (Karmiloff-Smith 1992; Goldin-Meadow, Kim, & Singer, 1999). In Study 1, fifty-nine 6-year-olds took part and completed a “Time Task” along with periodic teaching intervention to improve their comprehension of telling the time. Some children improved immediately, whereas others did so more gradually. The gradual improvers showed the highest levels of GA, particularly when they were at an intermediate level of performance. In Study 2, thirty-three 6-year-old children completed a balance beam task (Pine & Messer, 2000). Children who improved the representational level of their explanations (Karmiloff-Smith, 1992) of this task with training used more GA than those who did not. Practical implications for teaching and for recognizing transient knowledge states are discussed.

Keywords
Gaze aversion; Learning; Transient knowledge; Cognition; Problem-solving in children; Performance in children Psychological aspects; Interpersonal communication in children; Face perception Psychological aspects

Journal
Cognition and Instruction: Volume 27, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/07/2009
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/1535
PublisherTaylor & Francis (Routledge)
ISSN0737-0008