In this chapter, we bridge research on scientific and counterfactual reasoning. We review findings that children struggle with many aspects of scientific experimentation in the absence of formal instruction, but show sophistication in the ability to reason about counterfactual possibilities. We connect these two sets of findings by reviewing relevant theories on the relation between causal, scientific, and counterfactual reasoning before describing a growing body of work that indicates that prompting children to consider counterfactual alternatives can scaffold both the scientific inquiry process (hypothesis-testing and evidence evaluation) and science concept learning. This work suggests that counterfactual thought experiments are a promis...
Young children often struggle to answer the question “what would have happened?” particularly in cas...
This study investigated at what point in development 3- to 6-year-old children begin to demonstrate ...
This study investigated at what point in development 3- to 6-year-old children begin to demonstrate ...
Children often fail to control variables when conducting tests of hypotheses, yielding confounded ev...
When reasoning counterfactually, we think of alternative possibilities to what we know to be true ab...
In most developmental studies the only error children could make on counterfactual tasks was to answ...
In most developmental studies the only error children could make on counterfactual tasks was to answ...
Counterfactual reasoning (CFR)—mentally representing what the world would be like now if things had ...
Counterfactual reasoning (CFR)—mentally representing what the world would be like now if things had ...
Experiments, thought experiments and computer simulations are often used to study counterfactual sce...
© 2021 American Psychological Association Young children often struggle to answer the question “what...
Counterfactual reasoning is a hallmark of the human imagination. Recently, researchers have argued t...
Increasing evidence suggests that counterfactual reasoning is involved in false belief reasoning. Be...
Increasing evidence suggests that counterfactual reasoning is involved in false belief reasoning. Be...
Previous work has argued that young children do not answer counterfactual questions (e.g. “what woul...
Young children often struggle to answer the question “what would have happened?” particularly in cas...
This study investigated at what point in development 3- to 6-year-old children begin to demonstrate ...
This study investigated at what point in development 3- to 6-year-old children begin to demonstrate ...
Children often fail to control variables when conducting tests of hypotheses, yielding confounded ev...
When reasoning counterfactually, we think of alternative possibilities to what we know to be true ab...
In most developmental studies the only error children could make on counterfactual tasks was to answ...
In most developmental studies the only error children could make on counterfactual tasks was to answ...
Counterfactual reasoning (CFR)—mentally representing what the world would be like now if things had ...
Counterfactual reasoning (CFR)—mentally representing what the world would be like now if things had ...
Experiments, thought experiments and computer simulations are often used to study counterfactual sce...
© 2021 American Psychological Association Young children often struggle to answer the question “what...
Counterfactual reasoning is a hallmark of the human imagination. Recently, researchers have argued t...
Increasing evidence suggests that counterfactual reasoning is involved in false belief reasoning. Be...
Increasing evidence suggests that counterfactual reasoning is involved in false belief reasoning. Be...
Previous work has argued that young children do not answer counterfactual questions (e.g. “what woul...
Young children often struggle to answer the question “what would have happened?” particularly in cas...
This study investigated at what point in development 3- to 6-year-old children begin to demonstrate ...
This study investigated at what point in development 3- to 6-year-old children begin to demonstrate ...