Is there such a thing as a too-imaginative kid? Parenting experts say no. Dr. Paul Harris, professor of education at Harvard and author of â The Work of the Imaginationâ , says that kidsâ active imaginations are âessentially positiveâ and represent cognitive work, the way that children make sense of the world.Â
But if youâve got a kid who prefers her imaginary friend to making real onesâ or who terrorizes the first grade by explaining how zombies can get into oneâs home through the radiatorâ you might still wonder whether there comes a time to tamp it all down and force our kids to deal with reality.Â
In this episode we talk aboutÂ
The considerable upsides of a huge imaginationÂ
Why some children have imaginary friendsÂ
Why some kids engage in âworld playâ for their imaginary worlds long after the other kids have moved onÂ
How to help anxious kids whose imaginations can become overly activeÂ
How to encourage kids to engage in more imaginative playÂ
And hereâs links to the books, articles, and research we discuss in this episode:Â
Lauren Child's â Charlie and Lola book seriesâ , featuring the kind-of-visible Soren Lorensen
Louise Fitzhugh: â Harriet the Spyâ
Dr. Robin Alter: Anxiety and the Gift of Imagination
Paul L. Harris, â The Work of the Imaginationâ
Joshua A. Krisch for Fatherly: â Brilliant Kids Visit (and Create) Imaginary Worldsâ
Michelle Root-Bernstein: â The Creation of Imaginary Worldsâ
Marjorie Taylor: â Imaginary Companions and the Children Who Create Them â
Deena Skolnik Weissberg: â Distinguishing Imagination From Reality
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