Flights of Fancy

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Although considered as a relatively new field of study, childhood development is currently regarded as an important field in psychology because of its implications. The early childhood stages are the most crucial times of a person's development since it is at this time that s/he learns about his/her skills, values and personality. The child also discovers his/her own identity. Swiss psychologist Jean Piaget (1846-1980) once forwarded the theory of cognitive development, where, children undergo four stages of cognitive development. Piaget claims that during this course, children develop with the combination of ‘nature and nurture.1 The child starts to process symbols in the second stage of cognitive development, the preoperational stage (Papalia and Olds, 1996). An understanding of the processes present in child development also helps family members to better understand their own roles in raising their children.
In relation to childhood development, there are several factors experts consider that affect the process. One factor that is usually considered to affect development is of genetic origin, where traits or genes from the parents are said to be handed down to their offspring ( citation ). However, the researcher will not dwell on this topic further, but instead focus on another factor that will be more related to the topic-- environmental factors. Development in a child occurs as s/he interacts with the different stimuli in the environment (Myers 1992).
Environmental factors range from the inanimate objects to the live stimuli in the child’s society that would create impact on his/her behavior. At this time the family is often the most powerful agent in the child’s world, since being the first people they interact with, family...

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...ruth found in the real world. They are whisked off to a place where fantasy reigns supreme, but scenes remain familiar because children see their resemblances inthe real world. By introducing familiar scenes in a fictional setting, children gain the opportunity for discovering new worlds, ideas and views that would help shape their self-concept. The self-concept refers to a picture of how we see ourselves, made up of our characteristics, values, and ideas that starts from childhood (Papalia and Olds, 1996).
Reading fantasy-themed stories also encourage children develop imagination. Lynch-Brown and Tomlinson, on how these tales help in children’s thinking, wrote in 2008 that “By seeing the world around them in new ways and by constructing ways of living other than their own, children increase their ability to think divergently (Lynch-Brown and Tomlinson, 2008)(p.5)”

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