Child Development - Lecture Six Flashcards

The Uses and Abuses of Children's Drawings

1
Q

The Development of Children’s Drawling Ability - Scribbling Stage

A

2 to 3-years-old (sometimes before this)

Not representative - it isn’t a drawing of specific thing

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2
Q

The Development of Children’s Drawling Ability - Pre-schematic Stage

A

First attempts at human figure drawings 3-4 years
Tadpole Drawings
Circle/ellipse representing head
2 (or 4) protruding lines representing limbs

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3
Q

The Development of Children’s Drawling Ability - Schematic Stage

A
5-6 years
Child develop a “schema” 
Separate Trunk from Head 
Initially omit or misplace arms
Later on...
Substance added to limbs
Arms correctly placed
Detail (clothing, glasses, ears, etc.) 
Emergence of neck representation (last)
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4
Q

The Development of Children’s Drawling Ability - Realistic Stage

A

From around 9 years
Marks end of art as a spontaneous activity
More detail and expressions

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5
Q

The Development of Children’s Drawling Ability - Period of Indecision

A

Art is something to be done or left alone

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6
Q

The Clinical Value of Children’s Drawings - Projectile Measures

A

Intelligence
Psychological Wellbeing
Sexual Abuse

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7
Q

Psychological Wellbeing

A

Drawing tests which show no difference between children

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8
Q

Sexual Abuse

A

Difficulties in diagnosing sexual abuse in children led to clinicians seeking a non-verbal measure of abuse, studies suggest that drawings may differ according to abuse history but no consistent patterns have yet been found

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9
Q

The Clinical Value of Children’s Drawings - Verbal Communication Aid

A

Helping children to talk about events they have experienced where the content of the drawings are not relevant

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10
Q

Butler, Gross and Hayne’s (1995) study

A

Children aged 5- and 6-years old visited the Fire Station and interviewed one day later, half of the children recall through drawing and telling and the other half just telling. The children were asked questions into different way, free recall and directed recall. Finding showed that the draw and tell group reported twice as much information in the direct recall phase than the tell group but no differences between groups in the free recall phase

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11
Q

The beneficial effect of drawing extends to

A

Emotionally laden events
Children as young as 3 years and as old as 12 years
Delays of up to a year
Real clinical settings

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12
Q

Why might drawing work?

A
Increases the length of the interview
Reduces social barriers 
Children provide their own retrieval cues
Reinstates mental context
Affects the interviewer’s behaviour
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13
Q

Increases the length of the interview

A

Children more likely to say more and stay for longer and may remember more in the time

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14
Q

Reduces social barriers

A

Ignore person and focus on explaining their drawing

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15
Q

Reduces social barriers

Children provide their own retrieval cues

A

Act drawing is helping them remember things

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16
Q

Reinstates mental context

A

Puts kids back at the scene of the crime

17
Q

Affects the interviewer’s behaviour

A

Interviewers sit back and let the child draw instead of interfering and asking more questions