Re: Paper of potential interest

From: maria judith (mariasucupiralins@terra.com.br)
Date: Mon Mar 21 2005 - 16:54:59 PST


thank you very much.
it is really interesting.
maria
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Artin Goncu
  To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu
  Sent: Monday, March 21, 2005 4:01 PM
  Subject: Re: Paper of potential interest

  Here you go!

  At 06:29 PM 3/20/2005 -0300, you wrote:

    Hi Artin
    your paper interested me very much.
    how can I read the full text?
    thank you in advance.
    Maria
     
    Dra. Maria Judith Sucupira da Costa Lins
    Faculdade de Educacao
    Universidade Federal Rio de Janeiro-UFRJ
    Brasil
    Rua Abade Ramos 131-402
    Jardim Botanico 22461-090 - Rio de Janeiro - RJ
    tel: 25 37 10 80 / 81 82 99 48
    fax: 25 37 40 08
    e-mail: mariasucupiralins@terra.com.br
        ----- Original Message -----
        From: Artin Goncu
        To: xmca@weber.ucsd.edu ; edfac@uic.edu ; brogoff@cats.ucsc.edu ; harrispa@gse.harvard.edu ; lillard@virginia.edu ; borstein@uic.edu ; agn3@lehigh.edu ; howes@uic.edu ; cdc9@PSU.EDU ; farver@almaak.usc.edu ; Michael_Lamb@nih.gov ; pss01pks@gold.ac.uk ; PELLE013@TC.UMN.EDU ; S-Gaskins@neiu.edu ; suzanne.gaskins@gmail.com ; brougere@lshs.univ-paris13.fr ; u38580@uicvm.uic.edu
        Sent: Monday, March 07, 2005 8:00 PM
        Subject: Paper of potential interest

        Hi All:
        Anthony Perone and I have a new paper entitled "Pretend play as a life-sapn activity." The abstract is below, and the paper is available electronically. If you like a copy, please let me know of the net. Thanks, Artin
        Arguing against the dominant developmental theories (e.g., Piaget, 1945; Vygotsky, 1978) stating that pretend play is limited to early childhood, we illustrate that pretend play is an adaptive human activity of adulthood as well as childhood. We advance this argument on three levels. First, we offer an analysis of why the discipline of developmental psychology in the Western world considered play only as an activity of childhood by neglecting to explore whether or how pretend play exists during adulthood. Second, we discuss the similarities between adult improvisational theater and children's pretend play in illustrating our thesis that pretend continues to exist during adulthood. In this discussion, we focus on similarities on the definitions, psychological origins, social functions, and developmental consequences of pretend play and adult improvisation. Finally, we end the article with educational implications of conceptualizing pretend play as a life-span activity and offer directions for future research.

        Artin Goncu, Ph.D
        Professor
        College of Education M/C 147
        University of Illinois at Chicago
        1040 W. Harrison St.,
        Chicago, IL 60607
        (312) 996-5259
        Fax (312) 996-6400

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    Artin Goncu, Ph.D
    Professor
    College of Education M/C 147
    University of Illinois at Chicago
    1040 W. Harrison St.,
    Chicago, IL 60607
    (312) 996-5259
    Fax (312) 996-6400



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