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Tinkering to Innovation: How Children Refine Tools Over Multiple Attempts

Burdett, Emily R.R.; Ronfard, Samuel

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Authors

Samuel Ronfard



Abstract

The human capacity for technological innovation and creative problem-solving far surpasses that of any species but develops quite late. Prior work has typically presented children with problems requiring a single solution, a limited number of resources, and a limited amount of time. Such tasks do not allow children to utilize one of their strengths: their ability to engage in broad search and exploration. Thus, we hypothesized that a more open-ended innovation task might allow children to demonstrate greater innovative capacity by allowing them to discover and refine a solution over multiple attempts. Children were recruited from a museum and a children’s science event in the United Kingdom.We presented 129 children (66 girls, M= 6.91, SD= 2.18) between 4 and 12 years old with a variety of materials and asked children to use those materials to create tools to remove rewards from a box within 10 min.We coded the variety of tools children created each time they attempted to remove the rewards. By comparing successive attempts, we were able to obtain insights about how children built successful tools. Consistent with prior research, we found that older children were more likely than younger children to create successful tools. However, controlling for age, children who engaged in more tinkering—who retained a greater proportion of objects from their failed tools in subsequent attempts and who added more novel objects to their tools following failure—were more likely to build successful tools than children who did not.

Citation

Burdett, E. R., & Ronfard, S. (2023). Tinkering to Innovation: How Children Refine Tools Over Multiple Attempts. Developmental Psychology, 59(6), Article 1006–1016. https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0001512

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Nov 25, 2022
Online Publication Date Apr 13, 2023
Publication Date 2023-06
Deposit Date Jan 19, 2023
Publicly Available Date Apr 13, 2023
Journal Developmental Psychology
Print ISSN 0012-1649
Electronic ISSN 1939-0599
Publisher American Psychological Association
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 59
Issue 6
Article Number 1006–1016
DOI https://doi.org/10.1037/dev0001512
Keywords Life-span and Life-course Studies; Developmental and Educational Psychology; Demography
Public URL https://nottingham-repository.worktribe.com/output/16226335
Publisher URL https://psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/2023-62625-001.html

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