Children's expressed emotions during playful learning games
Thomas Vase Schultz Volden, Paolo Burelli

TL;DR
This study explores how young children express emotions like confusion and frustration during playful learning games, suggesting that managing confusion could enhance early childhood education.
Contribution
It provides empirical observational data on children's emotional responses during playful learning, extending confusion's role from complex academic tasks to early childhood education.
Findings
Children express confusion, frustration, and boredom during play sessions.
Emotional transitions align with models of affect dynamics in complex learning.
Confusion may be beneficial if properly managed in educational games.
Abstract
Studies on software tutoring systems for complex learning have shown that confusion has a beneficial relationship with the learning experience and student engagement (Arguel et al., 2017). Causing confusion can prevent boredom while signs of confusion can serve as a signal of genuine learning and as a predecessor for frustration. There is little to no research on the role of confusion in early childhood education and playful learning, as these studies primarily focus on high school and university students during complex learning tasks. Despite that, the field acknowledges that confusion may be caused by inconsistency between information and a student's internal model referred to as cognitive disequilibrium known from the theory of cognitive development, which was originally theorized based on observational studies on young children (D'Mello and Graesser, 2012). Therefore, there is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsChild Development and Digital Technology · Creativity in Education and Neuroscience · Early Childhood Education and Development
