Children’s Folklore Recent Titles in Greenwood Folklore Handbooks Myth: a handbook


COLLECTING FOLKLORE FROM CHILDREN



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COLLECTING FOLKLORE FROM CHILDREN
When folklorists collect information, they carefully consider their informants’ 
rights. Folklore fieldwork manuals, including Kenneth S. Goldstein’s 
Guide for 
Field Workers in Folklore
(1964) and Bruce Jackson’s 
Fieldwork
(1987), have urged 
folklorists to conduct their research ethically. Jackson emphasizes the importance 
of the “golden rule”: never do anything to other people that you would not want 
others to do to you. Respect for other people matters more than the need to col-
lect data. This point comes through clearly in the book 
People Studying People
by 
Robert A. Georges and Michael Owen Jones: “fieldworker and subject are first 
and foremost human beings” (3).


10 Children’s 
Folklore
Since the late 1970s, regulations for the protection of human research subjects 
have influenced folklorists’ work with their informants. The American Folklore 
Society issued a “Statement on Ethics” in 1986 and has continued to debate is-
sues related to ethics. Currently, the American Folklore Society’s human subjects 
position statement specifies that folklore research “is not quantitative but over-
whelmingly qualitative.” Research restrictions suitable for biomedical, clinical, 
and experimental models are not appropriate for folklore fieldwork, which relies 
on trust, involvement in the local community, and protection of informants’ 
confidentiality. According to the American Folklore Society’s “Human Subjects 
Position Statement,” folklore research that fits human subjects regulations should 
be eligible for expedited review.
Children deserve special consideration, because they are not yet mature enough 
to give informed consent to researchers. Although their parents and teachers can 
speak for the children to some extent, it is difficult to know whether children 
will, as adults, agree that they should have participated in research to which they 
agreed as children. Most folklore fieldworkers who have worked with children 
have kept the children’s names confidential and changed identifying details.
Iona and Peter Opie, whose 
Lore and Language of School Children
(1959) in-
spired many others to study children’s folklore, visited playgrounds to observe 
children at play and to talk with the children about their games, customs, beliefs, 
and other forms of folklore. Identifying the children by age and gender only, 
the Opies preserved their informants’ confidentiality. Similarly, Mary and Her-
bert Knapp, authors of 
One Potato, Two Potato: Th
e Secret Education of American 
Children
(1976), collected folklore from many different groups of children and 
refrained from identifying the children by name. Brian Sutton-Smith, author of 
Th
e Folkgames of Children
(1972), visited many playgrounds and schools in New 
Zealand and the United States. The fieldwork for Sutton-Smith’s important study 
of children’s narrative patterns, 
Th
e Folkstories of Children
(1981), took place in 
schools, with graduate students assisting in the process of story collection. Like 
the Opies and the Knapps, Sutton-Smith carefully preserved the confidentiality 
of the children with whom he and his assistants worked.
Since the mid-1980s, heightened concern about children’s safety and well-
being has caused reconsideration of young people’s rights and needs. The United 
Nations General Assembly adopted its Convention on the Rights of the Child 
in 1989. Writers of books and articles on the subject of children’s rights have 
explored why children need special consideration. Publications such as Philip 
Alston, Stephen Parker, and John Seymour’s 
Children, Rights, and the Law
(1992), 
F. Paul Kurmay’s “Do Children Need a Bill of Rights?” (1996), and Lee E. Teitel-
baum’s “Children’s Rights and the Problem of Equal Respect” (1999) have asked 
what new laws may be needed.
In this era of rapidly transmitted news, people learn very quickly about 
transgressions against the young. Public awareness of criminals’ mistreatment of 


Introduction 11
children has created a climate of fear. American school programs on “stranger 
danger,” AMBER alerts for kidnapped children, and strict regulation of people 
authorized to pick children up from day care and school remind us of children’s 
vulnerability to danger. Although these reminders help to keep children safe, they 
also make parents and teachers worry. Unstructured playtime outdoors, which 
children took for granted in the 1950s and 1960s, has, in many cases, been re-
placed by structured settings for supervised play.
At schools and in other structured environments such as summer camps, field-
workers can work effectively with children. It is important to ask officials at 
schools or other places for permission before fieldwork begins. In any fieldwork 
situation, researchers must give children time to get accustomed to their visitors 
and ask children for their assent. Gary Alan Fine’s “Methodological Problems of 
Collecting Folklore from Children” (1995) covers these issues in detail. Many 
British and American researchers have recently collected folklore from children 
on playgrounds and in other institutional settings. British folklorists’ play audits 
have yielded important sources of information about children’s play patterns.
For collectors of children’s folklore, the Internet offers exciting potential for 
gathering texts and information. Karen Ellis’s National Children’s Folksong Re -
pository Web site (http://www.edu-cyberpg.com/NCFR/ NCFR2.html) encour-
ages people to submit folk songs, jump-rope chants, circle games, call-and-response 
songs, and other materials by using their iPods, MP3 players, and Macintosh 
computers or PCs. Ellis provides a toll-free telephone number that contributors 
can access from anywhere in the United States. Emphasizing the importance of 
preserving traditional material, she asks each visitor to her Web site to “sing or 
chant [a song]. Save it now!” Her efforts have resulted in an overflowing archive 
of material that offers resources for future researchers.

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