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Children’s ability to interpret metaphorical polysemy in educational materials

Children’s ability to interpret metaphorical polysemy in educational materials
Children’s ability to interpret metaphorical polysemy in educational materials
Metaphor is used as a tool for communicating specialist knowledge to non-specialists in popular discourse and in educational contexts. Research has explored its use in higher education, but less is known about its efficacy with learners of school age. Experimental research has shown that very young children are able to interpret and produce attributional metaphors, but that relational metaphors and analogies do not seem to be understood until late childhood. The qualitative study reported here complements that work. We interviewed 30 children aged between 10 and 12 in focus groups, eliciting instances of academic words and meanings that they found new and challenging, and using naturally-occurring educational texts as prompts for discussion about individual words. We found some awareness of polysemy in general, and of word meanings that have a metaphorical basis. However, when they encountered a new metaphor-related meaning of a known word, the children showed a tendency to fall back on the previously known meaning even where this was contextually unfeasible. When specifically asked to work out the new meanings, it became evident that this is often challenging for them even with scaffolding.
2210-4070
Deignan, Alice
033c7590-8438-427e-b96e-7e597c11c3a2
Candarli, Duygu
4beb0fad-0664-499b-96aa-c2b9a33b4865
Semino, Elena
afea1309-9506-45de-b27c-11f1b6e3965c
Deignan, Alice
033c7590-8438-427e-b96e-7e597c11c3a2
Candarli, Duygu
4beb0fad-0664-499b-96aa-c2b9a33b4865
Semino, Elena
afea1309-9506-45de-b27c-11f1b6e3965c

Deignan, Alice, Candarli, Duygu and Semino, Elena (2026) Children’s ability to interpret metaphorical polysemy in educational materials. Metaphor and the Social World. (doi:10.1075/msw.25035.dei).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Metaphor is used as a tool for communicating specialist knowledge to non-specialists in popular discourse and in educational contexts. Research has explored its use in higher education, but less is known about its efficacy with learners of school age. Experimental research has shown that very young children are able to interpret and produce attributional metaphors, but that relational metaphors and analogies do not seem to be understood until late childhood. The qualitative study reported here complements that work. We interviewed 30 children aged between 10 and 12 in focus groups, eliciting instances of academic words and meanings that they found new and challenging, and using naturally-occurring educational texts as prompts for discussion about individual words. We found some awareness of polysemy in general, and of word meanings that have a metaphorical basis. However, when they encountered a new metaphor-related meaning of a known word, the children showed a tendency to fall back on the previously known meaning even where this was contextually unfeasible. When specifically asked to work out the new meanings, it became evident that this is often challenging for them even with scaffolding.

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Accepted/In Press date: 9 March 2026
Published date: 3 April 2026

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 511511
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/511511
ISSN: 2210-4070
PURE UUID: 112df1c2-48e9-422a-8996-406c24395ee6
ORCID for Duygu Candarli: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9965-7835

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Date deposited: 18 May 2026 16:50
Last modified: 19 May 2026 02:04

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Contributors

Author: Alice Deignan
Author: Duygu Candarli ORCID iD
Author: Elena Semino

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