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Childlore

Childlore is the folklore or folk culture of children and young people. It includes, for example, rhymes and games played in the school playground. The best known researchers of the field were Iona and Peter Opie.[1]

Syrian children playing in a New York City street

Overview

The subject matter of childlore includes the traditions of children between the ages of about 6 and 15 such as games, riddles, rhymes, jokes, pranks, superstitions, magical practices, wit, lyrics, guile, epithets, nicknames, torments, parody, oral legislation, seasonal customs, tortures, obscenities, codes, etc.[2] as well as individual activities such as solitary play, daydreaming, fantasies, imaginary friends and heroes, collections, scrapbooks, model worlds, comic reading, mass media interests, dramatizations, stories, art, etc.[2]

As a branch of folklore, childlore is concerned with those activities which are learned and passed on by children to other children. The stories and games taught by adults to children are not considered childlore except insofar as the children adapt and make them their own. In western culture most folklorists are concerned with children after they join their peers in elementary school or kindergarten. The traditions of childhood generally stop after the child enters intermediate school, which coincides with puberty and adolescence.[3]

Iona and Peter Opie demonstrated that the culture of children is quite distinctive, often going unnoticed by the adult world around it.[1]

Opie stated that the words of one game (Buck buck) had survived from the time of Nero.[4]

It has been argued that the conservatism of childlore contrasts with the way adult folklore is rapidly modified to fit changing circumstances.[5]

Nursery rhymes

A nursery rhyme is a traditional poem or song that's told or sung to young children. The term dates back to the late-18th and early-19th centuries in Britain where most of the earliest nursery rhymes that are known today were recorded in English but eventually spread to other countries.[6] The tradition of children's nursery rhymes is largely considered a form of verbal lore, both written and oral, with traditional utterances of repetitive patterns that vary in style and tone.[7]

History of nursery rhymes

The term "Mother Goose rhymes", which is interchangeable with nursery rhymes, originates from the early 1600s in relation to a collection of stories in a monthly periodical from a French critic, Jean Loret's "La Muse Historique". This contains the earliest reference to Mother Goose in the line "Comme un conte de la Mere Oye" translated into "Like a Mother Goose story".[8] However, these stories weren't referring to any of the best-known Mother Goose rhymes that are most associated with the term, which instead have English origins.

Thomas Carnan, stepson of publisher John Newbery's, became the owner of Newsberry Publishing House following the death of John Newberry and was the first to use the term Mother Goose for children's nursery rhymes when he published "Mother Goose's Melody" and "Sonnets for the Cradle".[9] This was the first known publication of the collection of Mother Goose rhymes in 1780, describing a compilation of traditional English nonsense nursery rhymes and songs each with its own black and white illustration and came from a variety of sources[9] The term 'Mother Goose' has been linked with traditional children's nursery rhymes and songs in the English speaking world ever since.

Nursery rhymes in context

For generations, many young children have grown up learning and passing on these Mother Goose rhymes as a part of oral tradition, perpetuating the culture of childhood. The anthropological approach to this field of childlore emphasizes that the songs and rhymes that children teach one another and pass forward through generations are unique to children, differing from the nursery rhymes taught by adults.[10] The works of Peter and Iona Opie brought significant contributions to this field of childlore, particularly in examining the traditions of children's nursery rhymes.

In the early 1950s, "The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren" offered considerable insight as the first known publication of ethnographic research in which children themselves were consulted about their beliefs and oral traditions, including songs and rhymes. Opie and Opie demonstrate that there are two classes of nursery rhymes that children inherit: those which are essential to the regulation of their games and their relationships with each other; and then those which are "mere expressions of exuberance" and are repeated for no more reason than they heard it from someone else.[11] The latter of the two classes speaks to observations where Opie and Opie discerned how traditional rhymes seemingly appeal to children as something funny and remarkable in itself, often fascinated by the way it all rhymes with repetitive patterns and various styles and tones. For example, a popular English rhyme Opie and Opie heard from children as they tumble out of school:[11]

I'm a knock kneed chicken and a bow legged sparrow,
I missed my bus so I went by barrow.
I went to the cafe for my dinner and my tea,
Too many radishes—Hick! Pardon me.

This particular rhyme had little relevancy or meaning to adults but for children, Opie and Opie observed that these rhymes fascinated the children with its amusing tones and repetitive patterns. Additionally, Opie and Opie observed that the children also used these nursery rhymes as a means of communication with each other during a time where language is still fairly new to them and there are many occurrences in children experiencing difficulties expressing themselves.[11] Simply, children often burst into telling and singing these rhymes as a cover in unexpected situations, to fill awkward silences, to hide an unexpressed emotion, or even in a gasp of excitement. As a result, these practices are very useful for children in their daily lives where they're easily adapting to using songs and rhymes in their social encounters, for amusement and for practical reasons.

Impact of nursery rhymes

Communication and language development

One of the earliest ways children learn to communicate is through nursery rhymes. Earlier on, hearing nursery rhymes is how children begin to imitate sounds and learn to speak with a broad English vocabulary.[12] Both the parents and child can speak and sing nursery rhymes together and the child will start to imitate the sounds and pronounce those words after talking about the nursery rhymes they heard. Eventually, the child begins to add additional words to their vocabulary, which opens up more opportunities of words to use when wanting to talk or sing. An example of this is seen in the saying "Sally go round the Sun".

When speaking this nursery rhyme to the child, the parents have the option to change the word around to the word over, under or through, expanding the vocabulary of the child and improving their language skills. Likewise, children eventually begin to learn to communicate using various styles of language, such as alliteration and onomatopoeia through nursery rhymes, which provides children with a framework for these various styles of language as they mature in their language skills.

Additionally, nursery rhymes expand the mental ability of children, exposing them to new ideas and encouraging them to use their imagination through the use of repetition.[12] The simple, easily repeatable and satisfying rhythmic pattern makes nursery rhymes extremely appealing to children, which is significant as repetition is essential in language development. Simply, in order for a nursery rhyme to be effective, it must be repeated to the child multiple times. This repetition allows the child to increase their phonetic awareness and promotes spelling skills.[12]

Furthermore, the anthropological works of Morag Maclean, Peter Bryant, and Lynette Bradley provides further insight examining the impact of nursery rhymes on communication and language development. In 1987, an in-depth study was conducted in which the researchers found that the study demonstrated that children begin their phonetic awareness before learning to read through activities which have no reading involved, such that there is a strong relationship between knowledge of nursery rhymes and phonetic development.[13]  Simply, the ability to break down words into sounds and syllables is necessary for children to fully understand and use the alphabet and children develop these early literacy skills by learning nursery rhymes. For example, this was observed in the nursery rhyme "A Sailor Went to the Sea":

My captain went to the sea, sea, sea
To see what he could see, see, see

The exposure to this nursery rhyme allowed children to learn homophones and how there are different meanings for the words sea and see, even though they are pronounced the same, which essentially allows children to enhance and improve their language skills.[14] All in all, practicing nursery rhymes effectively allows most children to receive great cognitive benefits.

Social and emotional development

The nature of nursery rhymes serve as a tool for building and improving social and emotional skills for young children. Fundamentally, traditional children's nursery rhymes are a method of storytelling with beneficial aspects, such as voice inflection and engagement with the listener that allows children to develop a social and emotional understanding from the nursery rhymes.[13]

Additionally, many children may learn to make friends and build relationships with other children through nursery rhymes. Often, nursery rhymes involve cooperation and/or physical activity with the listener, which can be conducted in larger group settings. As a result, children have the opportunity to work with one another through guided instructions, which facilitate effective and engaged interactions contributing directly to their social development.[15]

For example, the nursery rhyme "Ring Around the Rosie" involves children dancing around in a circle as they recite a short and catchy rhyme:[15]

Ring-a-ring-a-rosies
A pocket full of posies
Ashes, ashes
We all fall down!

Simply participating in these interactions in connections between movement and rhymes can allow children to engage with others, promoting social skills. Also, generally, nursery rhymes tend to involve repeated interactions between characters of all ages, genders, shapes and sizes. In this way, a child gradually develops an acceptance and respect for all people regardless of a person's background or cultural differences.[16]

Likewise, traditional children's nursery rhymes have a similar beneficial impact on emotional development. Primarily, nursery rhymes serve as an effective practice providing nourishment and comfort inducing a calming effect on children, especially right before sleep.

Simply hearing nursery rhymes before falling asleep reminds children that they are in a familiar environment, which facilitates feelings of safety and a peace of mind. With that in mind, this provides a possible explanation for why non-parental caretakers often rely on nursery rhymes to alleviate the child's discomfort and uncertainty whenever their parents are absent.[17] As a result, nursery rhymes serve as an effective tool for emotional development in building trust in uncomfortable situations.

Moreover, some traditional children's nursery rhymes may involve some sorts of conflict, which the characters within the nursery rhyme must find a resolution. At times, this may involve reconciling certain unwanted emotions of jealousy, anger, or sadness stemming from a multitude of causes.[17] Consequently, this enables an teachable understanding of adversity and assisting in building strong emotional management skills in children.

A primary example of this lies within the vastly popular "Itsy Bitsy Spider" through the refrain:[18]

The itsy bitsy spider crawled up the water spout.
Down came the rain, and washed the spider out.
Out came the sun, and dried up all the rain,
and the itsy bitsy spider went up the spout again.

In this instance, the spider is washed down from the top of the water spout for reasons outside of its control; however, the spider endures the rain and once again reaches the top of the spout. Although simple in concept, these traditional children's nursery rhymes instill the value of perseverance in spite of unavoidable obstacles and essentially improve the social and emotional development of children.

Cross-cultural observations

Nearly every culture throughout the world has their own various forms of nursery rhymes. Although the theme of each rhyme varies across cultures, all of these distinct traditional children's nursery rhymes are designed to convey similar types of messages and tend to take the same shape with respect to meter, rhythm and rhyme.[19] While there are a few stylistic differences for certain cultures as compared to others, these tend to be minor.

To elaborate, the anthropological approach provides insight into one of the major similarities that can be seen in nursery rhymes across cultures, which is the meter used. The goal of most nursery rhymes is to be told or sung to young children as a form of entertainment or as a means of learning certain lessons. To accomplish this goal, traditional children's nursery rhymes must take a simple form that can easily be learned and repeated by children.[19] As a result, nursery rhymes typically take the shape of a repetitive and predictable pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables, known as isochronic meter. This meter does not necessarily have to take the form of repeating stressed and unstressed syllables one at a time, but will often leave as many as four unstressed syllables between each stressed syllable.[19]  The simplicity of isochronic meter allows for this slight variability in the stressed syllable pattern such that each poem does not have to take the exact same form and can still be easily read in a very similar manner across various cultures. An example of this pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables can be seen clearly in the style of poems in several languages including English, Chinese, Bengkulu, and Yoruba in Nigeria.

Furthermore, another significant aspect of nursery rhymes that tends to be fairly standard across cultures is the number of lines that occur in a poem. Typically, these poems contain four lines with four beats in each line. These beats, as mentioned above, occur in an isochronic pattern.[19] The anthropological approach to traditional nursery rhymes has revealed that in English poetry, it is highly uncommon to find a nursery rhyme that deviates from this pattern. But, in other cultures, these conventions may be different. For example, in Chinese nursery rhymes, there seems to be less rigidity in the requirement that poems have four beats per line only. There are multiple examples of nursery rhymes that contain a longer first line—with six beats—followed by three more conventional lines containing four beats each. Additionally, in Chinese nursery rhymes, certain poems have been seen to have up to 6 four-beat lines as opposed to the more traditional four lines.[19]

Lastly, an additional convention that seems to be fairly universal in children's nursery rhymes is the pattern of rests before or after the lines. In English poetry, a rest is found most commonly after the second and fourth lines of a poem, or after each line in a poem, while sometimes there will be rests after lines one, two, and four.[19] Any deviations from these three schemes will tend to create awkwardness in the reading. Similar patterns are found within other cultures. For example, rhymes in Bengkulu often require rests at the beginning of each verse, which is very similar to the pattern found in English with slight variation, while rests in Chinese tend to be like those in English, with rests after each line.[19]

Further cross-cultural similarities in nursery rhymes are aspects such as rhyme scheme, which tend to be found in an abab pattern, with slight variations, although rhyme scheme variation is less common as it adds complexity to the reading and understanding of these rhymes which are inherently designed to be much simpler.[19] All in all, nursery rhymes are at the foundation of culture and provide great insight into the common, socially learned knowledge and behavioral patterns across the world.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Bishop, Julia C. (2014-09-02). "The lives and legacies of Iona and Peter Opie". International Journal of Play. 3 (3): 205–223. doi:10.1080/21594937.2014.993208. ISSN 2159-4937. S2CID 144191529.
  2. ^ a b Sutton-Smith 1970:1–8.
  3. ^ Grider 1980:159–160
  4. ^ Opie: 1987.
  5. ^ Fine, Gary Alan (1980). "Children and Their Culture: Exploring Newell's Paradox". Western Folklore. 39 (3): 170–183. doi:10.2307/1499799. ISSN 0043-373X. JSTOR 1499799.
  6. ^ Galway, Elizabeth (2013-06-25). "Nursery Rhymes". Oxford Bibliographies Online Datasets. doi:10.1093/obo/9780199791231-0124.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  7. ^ McLeod, Norma; Dorson, Richard M. (January 1975). "Folklore and Folklife: An Introduction". Ethnomusicology. 19 (1): 145. doi:10.2307/849754. ISSN 0014-1836. JSTOR 849754.
  8. ^ Shahed, Syed Mohammad (1995). "A Common Nomenclature for Traditional Rhymes". Asian Folklore Studies. 54 (2): 307–314. doi:10.2307/1178946. ISSN 0385-2342. JSTOR 1178946.
  9. ^ a b Alchin, Linda (2013). The Secret History of Nursery Rhymes. Nielsen. ISBN 978-0-9567486-1-4.
  10. ^ James, Allison (September 1998). "Play in Childhood: An Anthropological Perspective". Child Psychology and Psychiatry Review. 3 (3): 104–109. doi:10.1017/s1360641798001580. ISSN 1360-6417.
  11. ^ a b c Archibald., Opie, Iona (2001). The lore and language of schoolchildren. New York Review Books. ISBN 0-940322-69-2. OCLC 45558860.
  12. ^ a b c Kenney, Susan (October 2005). "Nursery Rhymes: Foundation for Learning". General Music Today. 19 (1): 28–31. doi:10.1177/10483713050190010108. ISSN 1048-3713. S2CID 143209721.
  13. ^ Maclean, Morag; Bryant, Peter; Bradley, Lynette (1987). "Rhymes, Nursery Rhymes, and Reading in Early Childhood". Merrill-Palmer Quarterly. 33 (3): 255–281. ISSN 0272-930X. JSTOR 23086536.
  14. ^ Bennett, Howard J. (October 2000). "Medicated Nursery Rhymes". Obstetrics & Gynecology. 96 (4): 643. doi:10.1097/00006250-200010000-00032. ISSN 0029-7844.
  15. ^ a b Mullen, Ginger (2017-09-27). "More Than Words: Using Nursery Rhymes and Songs to Support Domains of Child Development". Journal of Childhood Studies. 42 (2): 42. doi:10.18357/jcs.v42i2.17841. ISSN 2371-4115.
  16. ^ Kenney, Susan (October 2005). "Nursery Rhymes: Foundation for Learning". General Music Today. 19 (1): 28–31. doi:10.1177/10483713050190010108. ISSN 1048-3713. S2CID 143209721.
  17. ^ a b Music, Graham (2016). Nurturing natures: Attachment and children's emotional, sociocultural, and brain development (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Routledge.
  18. ^ Cole & Calmenson (1991). Eentsy weentsy spider: Fingerplays and action rhymes. New York, NY: William Morrow and Company.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h Burling, Robbins (December 1966). "The Metrics of Children's Verse: A Cross-Linguistic Study". American Anthropologist. 68 (6): 1418–1441. doi:10.1525/aa.1966.68.6.02a00040. ISSN 0002-7294.

References

  • Grider, Sylvia Ann. The Study of Children's Folklore. Western Folklore 39.3, Children's Folklore (1980): 159–69.
  • Mendoza, Vicente T. Lirica Infantil De Mexico. Letras Mexicanas. 2a ed. Mexico: Fondo de Cultura Economica, 1980
  • Opie, Iona Archibald, and Peter Opie. The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren. Trans. Peter Opie. Oxford Paperbacks. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987.
  • Sutton-Smith, Brian. Psychology of Childlore: The Triviality Barrier. Western Folklore 29.1 (1970): 1–8.
  • Burling, Robbins. "The Metrics of Children's Verse: A Cross-Linguistic Study". The Metrics of Children's Verse: A Cross‐Linguistic Study1, University of Michigan, anthrosource.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1525/aa.1966.68.6.02a00040.

Further reading

  • Bronner, Simon J. (1988). American Children's Folklore. Little Rock, AR: August House. ISBN 0-87483-068-0. OCLC 18322123.
  • Sutton-Smith, Brian; Mechling, Jay; Johnson, Thomas W.; McMahon, Felicia R., eds. (1999). Children's folklore : a source book. Logan, UT: Utah State University Press. ISBN 0-87421-280-4. OCLC 916979751.
  • Opie, Iona (1993). The people in the playground. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-811265-3. OCLC 803457772.
  • Tucker, Elizabeth (2008). Children's Folklore : A handbook. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-34189-2. OCLC 226357704.

childlore, folklore, folk, culture, children, young, people, includes, example, rhymes, games, played, school, playground, best, known, researchers, field, were, iona, peter, opie, syrian, children, playing, york, city, street, contents, overview, nursery, rhy. Childlore is the folklore or folk culture of children and young people It includes for example rhymes and games played in the school playground The best known researchers of the field were Iona and Peter Opie 1 Syrian children playing in a New York City street Contents 1 Overview 2 Nursery rhymes 2 1 History of nursery rhymes 2 1 1 Nursery rhymes in context 2 2 Impact of nursery rhymes 2 2 1 Communication and language development 2 2 2 Social and emotional development 2 2 3 Cross cultural observations 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 Further readingOverview EditThe subject matter of childlore includes the traditions of children between the ages of about 6 and 15 such as games riddles rhymes jokes pranks superstitions magical practices wit lyrics guile epithets nicknames torments parody oral legislation seasonal customs tortures obscenities codes etc 2 as well as individual activities such as solitary play daydreaming fantasies imaginary friends and heroes collections scrapbooks model worlds comic reading mass media interests dramatizations stories art etc 2 As a branch of folklore childlore is concerned with those activities which are learned and passed on by children to other children The stories and games taught by adults to children are not considered childlore except insofar as the children adapt and make them their own In western culture most folklorists are concerned with children after they join their peers in elementary school or kindergarten The traditions of childhood generally stop after the child enters intermediate school which coincides with puberty and adolescence 3 Iona and Peter Opie demonstrated that the culture of children is quite distinctive often going unnoticed by the adult world around it 1 Opie stated that the words of one game Buck buck had survived from the time of Nero 4 It has been argued that the conservatism of childlore contrasts with the way adult folklore is rapidly modified to fit changing circumstances 5 Nursery rhymes EditA nursery rhyme is a traditional poem or song that s told or sung to young children The term dates back to the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Britain where most of the earliest nursery rhymes that are known today were recorded in English but eventually spread to other countries 6 The tradition of children s nursery rhymes is largely considered a form of verbal lore both written and oral with traditional utterances of repetitive patterns that vary in style and tone 7 History of nursery rhymes Edit The term Mother Goose rhymes which is interchangeable with nursery rhymes originates from the early 1600s in relation to a collection of stories in a monthly periodical from a French critic Jean Loret s La Muse Historique This contains the earliest reference to Mother Goose in the line Comme un conte de la Mere Oye translated into Like a Mother Goose story 8 However these stories weren t referring to any of the best known Mother Goose rhymes that are most associated with the term which instead have English origins Thomas Carnan stepson of publisher John Newbery s became the owner of Newsberry Publishing House following the death of John Newberry and was the first to use the term Mother Goose for children s nursery rhymes when he published Mother Goose s Melody and Sonnets for the Cradle 9 This was the first known publication of the collection of Mother Goose rhymes in 1780 describing a compilation of traditional English nonsense nursery rhymes and songs each with its own black and white illustration and came from a variety of sources 9 The term Mother Goose has been linked with traditional children s nursery rhymes and songs in the English speaking world ever since Nursery rhymes in context Edit For generations many young children have grown up learning and passing on these Mother Goose rhymes as a part of oral tradition perpetuating the culture of childhood The anthropological approach to this field of childlore emphasizes that the songs and rhymes that children teach one another and pass forward through generations are unique to children differing from the nursery rhymes taught by adults 10 The works of Peter and Iona Opie brought significant contributions to this field of childlore particularly in examining the traditions of children s nursery rhymes In the early 1950s The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren offered considerable insight as the first known publication of ethnographic research in which children themselves were consulted about their beliefs and oral traditions including songs and rhymes Opie and Opie demonstrate that there are two classes of nursery rhymes that children inherit those which are essential to the regulation of their games and their relationships with each other and then those which are mere expressions of exuberance and are repeated for no more reason than they heard it from someone else 11 The latter of the two classes speaks to observations where Opie and Opie discerned how traditional rhymes seemingly appeal to children as something funny and remarkable in itself often fascinated by the way it all rhymes with repetitive patterns and various styles and tones For example a popular English rhyme Opie and Opie heard from children as they tumble out of school 11 I m a knock kneed chicken and a bow legged sparrow I missed my bus so I went by barrow I went to the cafe for my dinner and my tea Too many radishes Hick Pardon me This particular rhyme had little relevancy or meaning to adults but for children Opie and Opie observed that these rhymes fascinated the children with its amusing tones and repetitive patterns Additionally Opie and Opie observed that the children also used these nursery rhymes as a means of communication with each other during a time where language is still fairly new to them and there are many occurrences in children experiencing difficulties expressing themselves 11 Simply children often burst into telling and singing these rhymes as a cover in unexpected situations to fill awkward silences to hide an unexpressed emotion or even in a gasp of excitement As a result these practices are very useful for children in their daily lives where they re easily adapting to using songs and rhymes in their social encounters for amusement and for practical reasons Impact of nursery rhymes Edit Communication and language development Edit One of the earliest ways children learn to communicate is through nursery rhymes Earlier on hearing nursery rhymes is how children begin to imitate sounds and learn to speak with a broad English vocabulary 12 Both the parents and child can speak and sing nursery rhymes together and the child will start to imitate the sounds and pronounce those words after talking about the nursery rhymes they heard Eventually the child begins to add additional words to their vocabulary which opens up more opportunities of words to use when wanting to talk or sing An example of this is seen in the saying Sally go round the Sun When speaking this nursery rhyme to the child the parents have the option to change the word around to the word over under or through expanding the vocabulary of the child and improving their language skills Likewise children eventually begin to learn to communicate using various styles of language such as alliteration and onomatopoeia through nursery rhymes which provides children with a framework for these various styles of language as they mature in their language skills Additionally nursery rhymes expand the mental ability of children exposing them to new ideas and encouraging them to use their imagination through the use of repetition 12 The simple easily repeatable and satisfying rhythmic pattern makes nursery rhymes extremely appealing to children which is significant as repetition is essential in language development Simply in order for a nursery rhyme to be effective it must be repeated to the child multiple times This repetition allows the child to increase their phonetic awareness and promotes spelling skills 12 Furthermore the anthropological works of Morag Maclean Peter Bryant and Lynette Bradley provides further insight examining the impact of nursery rhymes on communication and language development In 1987 an in depth study was conducted in which the researchers found that the study demonstrated that children begin their phonetic awareness before learning to read through activities which have no reading involved such that there is a strong relationship between knowledge of nursery rhymes and phonetic development 13 Simply the ability to break down words into sounds and syllables is necessary for children to fully understand and use the alphabet and children develop these early literacy skills by learning nursery rhymes For example this was observed in the nursery rhyme A Sailor Went to the Sea My captain went to the sea sea sea To see what he could see see see The exposure to this nursery rhyme allowed children to learn homophones and how there are different meanings for the words sea and see even though they are pronounced the same which essentially allows children to enhance and improve their language skills 14 All in all practicing nursery rhymes effectively allows most children to receive great cognitive benefits Social and emotional development Edit The nature of nursery rhymes serve as a tool for building and improving social and emotional skills for young children Fundamentally traditional children s nursery rhymes are a method of storytelling with beneficial aspects such as voice inflection and engagement with the listener that allows children to develop a social and emotional understanding from the nursery rhymes 13 Additionally many children may learn to make friends and build relationships with other children through nursery rhymes Often nursery rhymes involve cooperation and or physical activity with the listener which can be conducted in larger group settings As a result children have the opportunity to work with one another through guided instructions which facilitate effective and engaged interactions contributing directly to their social development 15 For example the nursery rhyme Ring Around the Rosie involves children dancing around in a circle as they recite a short and catchy rhyme 15 Ring a ring a rosies A pocket full of posies Ashes ashes We all fall down Simply participating in these interactions in connections between movement and rhymes can allow children to engage with others promoting social skills Also generally nursery rhymes tend to involve repeated interactions between characters of all ages genders shapes and sizes In this way a child gradually develops an acceptance and respect for all people regardless of a person s background or cultural differences 16 Likewise traditional children s nursery rhymes have a similar beneficial impact on emotional development Primarily nursery rhymes serve as an effective practice providing nourishment and comfort inducing a calming effect on children especially right before sleep Simply hearing nursery rhymes before falling asleep reminds children that they are in a familiar environment which facilitates feelings of safety and a peace of mind With that in mind this provides a possible explanation for why non parental caretakers often rely on nursery rhymes to alleviate the child s discomfort and uncertainty whenever their parents are absent 17 As a result nursery rhymes serve as an effective tool for emotional development in building trust in uncomfortable situations Moreover some traditional children s nursery rhymes may involve some sorts of conflict which the characters within the nursery rhyme must find a resolution At times this may involve reconciling certain unwanted emotions of jealousy anger or sadness stemming from a multitude of causes 17 Consequently this enables an teachable understanding of adversity and assisting in building strong emotional management skills in children A primary example of this lies within the vastly popular Itsy Bitsy Spider through the refrain 18 The itsy bitsy spider crawled up the water spout Down came the rain and washed the spider out Out came the sun and dried up all the rain and the itsy bitsy spider went up the spout again In this instance the spider is washed down from the top of the water spout for reasons outside of its control however the spider endures the rain and once again reaches the top of the spout Although simple in concept these traditional children s nursery rhymes instill the value of perseverance in spite of unavoidable obstacles and essentially improve the social and emotional development of children Cross cultural observations Edit Nearly every culture throughout the world has their own various forms of nursery rhymes Although the theme of each rhyme varies across cultures all of these distinct traditional children s nursery rhymes are designed to convey similar types of messages and tend to take the same shape with respect to meter rhythm and rhyme 19 While there are a few stylistic differences for certain cultures as compared to others these tend to be minor To elaborate the anthropological approach provides insight into one of the major similarities that can be seen in nursery rhymes across cultures which is the meter used The goal of most nursery rhymes is to be told or sung to young children as a form of entertainment or as a means of learning certain lessons To accomplish this goal traditional children s nursery rhymes must take a simple form that can easily be learned and repeated by children 19 As a result nursery rhymes typically take the shape of a repetitive and predictable pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables known as isochronic meter This meter does not necessarily have to take the form of repeating stressed and unstressed syllables one at a time but will often leave as many as four unstressed syllables between each stressed syllable 19 The simplicity of isochronic meter allows for this slight variability in the stressed syllable pattern such that each poem does not have to take the exact same form and can still be easily read in a very similar manner across various cultures An example of this pattern of stressed and unstressed syllables can be seen clearly in the style of poems in several languages including English Chinese Bengkulu and Yoruba in Nigeria Furthermore another significant aspect of nursery rhymes that tends to be fairly standard across cultures is the number of lines that occur in a poem Typically these poems contain four lines with four beats in each line These beats as mentioned above occur in an isochronic pattern 19 The anthropological approach to traditional nursery rhymes has revealed that in English poetry it is highly uncommon to find a nursery rhyme that deviates from this pattern But in other cultures these conventions may be different For example in Chinese nursery rhymes there seems to be less rigidity in the requirement that poems have four beats per line only There are multiple examples of nursery rhymes that contain a longer first line with six beats followed by three more conventional lines containing four beats each Additionally in Chinese nursery rhymes certain poems have been seen to have up to 6 four beat lines as opposed to the more traditional four lines 19 Lastly an additional convention that seems to be fairly universal in children s nursery rhymes is the pattern of rests before or after the lines In English poetry a rest is found most commonly after the second and fourth lines of a poem or after each line in a poem while sometimes there will be rests after lines one two and four 19 Any deviations from these three schemes will tend to create awkwardness in the reading Similar patterns are found within other cultures For example rhymes in Bengkulu often require rests at the beginning of each verse which is very similar to the pattern found in English with slight variation while rests in Chinese tend to be like those in English with rests after each line 19 Further cross cultural similarities in nursery rhymes are aspects such as rhyme scheme which tend to be found in an abab pattern with slight variations although rhyme scheme variation is less common as it adds complexity to the reading and understanding of these rhymes which are inherently designed to be much simpler 19 All in all nursery rhymes are at the foundation of culture and provide great insight into the common socially learned knowledge and behavioral patterns across the world See also EditChildren s street culture Latin American childlore Cooties Dong Dong DongdaemunNotes Edit a b Bishop Julia C 2014 09 02 The lives and legacies of Iona and Peter Opie International Journal of Play 3 3 205 223 doi 10 1080 21594937 2014 993208 ISSN 2159 4937 S2CID 144191529 a b Sutton Smith 1970 1 8 Grider 1980 159 160 Opie 1987 Fine Gary Alan 1980 Children and Their Culture Exploring Newell s Paradox Western Folklore 39 3 170 183 doi 10 2307 1499799 ISSN 0043 373X JSTOR 1499799 Galway Elizabeth 2013 06 25 Nursery Rhymes Oxford Bibliographies Online Datasets doi 10 1093 obo 9780199791231 0124 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link McLeod Norma Dorson Richard M January 1975 Folklore and Folklife An Introduction Ethnomusicology 19 1 145 doi 10 2307 849754 ISSN 0014 1836 JSTOR 849754 Shahed Syed Mohammad 1995 A Common Nomenclature for Traditional Rhymes Asian Folklore Studies 54 2 307 314 doi 10 2307 1178946 ISSN 0385 2342 JSTOR 1178946 a b Alchin Linda 2013 The Secret History of Nursery Rhymes Nielsen ISBN 978 0 9567486 1 4 James Allison September 1998 Play in Childhood An Anthropological Perspective Child Psychology and Psychiatry Review 3 3 104 109 doi 10 1017 s1360641798001580 ISSN 1360 6417 a b c Archibald Opie Iona 2001 The lore and language of schoolchildren New York Review Books ISBN 0 940322 69 2 OCLC 45558860 a b c Kenney Susan October 2005 Nursery Rhymes Foundation for Learning General Music Today 19 1 28 31 doi 10 1177 10483713050190010108 ISSN 1048 3713 S2CID 143209721 Maclean Morag Bryant Peter Bradley Lynette 1987 Rhymes Nursery Rhymes and Reading in Early Childhood Merrill Palmer Quarterly 33 3 255 281 ISSN 0272 930X JSTOR 23086536 Bennett Howard J October 2000 Medicated Nursery Rhymes Obstetrics amp Gynecology 96 4 643 doi 10 1097 00006250 200010000 00032 ISSN 0029 7844 a b Mullen Ginger 2017 09 27 More Than Words Using Nursery Rhymes and Songs to Support Domains of Child Development Journal of Childhood Studies 42 2 42 doi 10 18357 jcs v42i2 17841 ISSN 2371 4115 Kenney Susan October 2005 Nursery Rhymes Foundation for Learning General Music Today 19 1 28 31 doi 10 1177 10483713050190010108 ISSN 1048 3713 S2CID 143209721 a b Music Graham 2016 Nurturing natures Attachment and children s emotional sociocultural and brain development 2nd ed New York NY Routledge Cole amp Calmenson 1991 Eentsy weentsy spider Fingerplays and action rhymes New York NY William Morrow and Company a b c d e f g h Burling Robbins December 1966 The Metrics of Children s Verse A Cross Linguistic Study American Anthropologist 68 6 1418 1441 doi 10 1525 aa 1966 68 6 02a00040 ISSN 0002 7294 References EditGrider Sylvia Ann The Study of Children s Folklore Western Folklore 39 3 Children s Folklore 1980 159 69 Mendoza Vicente T Lirica Infantil De Mexico Letras Mexicanas 2a ed Mexico Fondo de Cultura Economica 1980 Opie Iona Archibald and Peter Opie The Lore and Language of Schoolchildren Trans Peter Opie Oxford Paperbacks New York Oxford University Press 1987 Sutton Smith Brian Psychology of Childlore The Triviality Barrier Western Folklore 29 1 1970 1 8 Burling Robbins The Metrics of Children s Verse A Cross Linguistic Study The Metrics of Children s Verse A Cross Linguistic Study1 University of Michigan anthrosource onlinelibrary wiley com doi epdf 10 1525 aa 1966 68 6 02a00040 Further reading EditBronner Simon J 1988 American Children s Folklore Little Rock AR August House ISBN 0 87483 068 0 OCLC 18322123 Sutton Smith Brian Mechling Jay Johnson Thomas W McMahon Felicia R eds 1999 Children s folklore a source book Logan UT Utah State University Press ISBN 0 87421 280 4 OCLC 916979751 Opie Iona 1993 The people in the playground Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 811265 3 OCLC 803457772 Tucker Elizabeth 2008 Children s Folklore A handbook Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 34189 2 OCLC 226357704 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Childlore amp oldid 1147750815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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