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Ben Atkinson, PhD's avatar

I was very happy to see this article pop up in my e-mail this morning! I have missed your writings. I understand your reasons for the wait, though. :-)

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Colin Horgan's avatar

It seems a key component of childlore's success/ongoing spread is personal connection. Childlore can't spread if kids don't hang out together. I'm less worried that parents or perpetually childish adults somehow ruin childlore than I am about screens and isolated (while connected virtually) play. When I walk on to my kids' school ground and see some of the older ones sitting against the outside school walls on their laptops, or peering over one another's shoulders at a phone – that's when I think it's time to worry if the well-worn rules of childhood and its governing ideas, rhymes, and inherent sense of fairness are being lost. Childhood, in this sense, doesn't die in adulthood, but in the space between the kids and the screen.

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