English, asked by abahay2224, 8 months ago

write a converciation between two friends on chidlishness.​

Answers

Answered by adi800563
5

Explanation:

Children’s Conversations

An investigation into the depths of young children’s conversations to see what we can learn about school

MORE THAN CUTE

MARRIAGE #1

A conversation involving Reed (boy, age 5), June (girl, age 5) and Fiona (girl, age 5), recorded by Victoria (adult)

Reed: Well, anyway, if you want to come to my house, you have to give me candy and then you can go in my hot tub.

Fiona: What kind of candy?

Reed: Like MnM’s or something.

June (to Reed): I’m going to your house and we’re going to marry.

Reed: No.

June (to Fiona): Are you going to marry Reed?

Fiona: No. But I’m going to marry a boy.

June: Right. Because girls marry boys. I don’t think girls marry girls.

Fiona (to June): Do girls marry girls? (to Victoria, adult) Vicki, do girls marry girls and boys marry boys?

Victoria: Well, they’re working on that right now. In most states they can’t.

Fiona: Maybe they can just go to the mountains and marry.

June: Yeah.

Fiona: And, anyway, I’m going to marry a boy.

MARRIAGE #2

June: When I get older, I’m going to marry.

Reed: Not me.

Victoria (adult): Do you remember a while ago you two talked about marriage? I have that conversation. Here. Listen. (plays tape of Marriage #1 above)

Reed: Well. I’m going to marry Freya.

June: I’m going to marry… um… my dream… because… you have to have dreams and you gotta find them.

Reed: That’s not for me. I’m not gonna! No! No! No!

June: You’re not gonna dream?

Reed: I’m just gonna dream and not find it. Because dreams don’t show up. You don’t want to find your dream, because my dad says they never show up when you find them.

June: Good dreams or bad dreams?

Reed: Both. They won’t show up.

June: Oh. I will find mine.

So what can we conclude about children’s conversations by looking at Marriage #1 and #2? Although we cannot know everything, we had these agreements.

It is readily apparent from their tenacity that they were seriously invested in what they said.

They cared about the topics and each other.

They we’re amazingly receptive of other’s viewpoints while being assertive of their own.

I think most people would agree more generally:

Children have a powerful voice.

They know how to listen to others.

They want to be listened to.

If will satisfy with it, then mark my answer as a brainlist

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