“…Although age, a simple story structure (e.g., a limited number of analogical relations; Goswami, 2001; Holyoak et al., 1984), and access to the relevant features of the original story (Brown et al., 1986; Kim & Choi, 2003) are important for children’s transfer, researchers have identified additional influences on children’s ability to use analogy. These influences include perceptual similarity between the original story and the context of the transfer situation (Crisafi & Brown, 1986; Daehler & Chen, 1993; Holyoak et al., 1984), familiarity with the characters in the source story (Goswami, 2001; Holyoak et al., 1984; Richert, Shawber, Hoffman, & Taylor, 2009), and the style of the analogical task, with younger children profiting from a story‐style format rather than a formal‐style task (e.g., A:B::C:D; Singer‐Freeman, 2005; Tunteler & Resing, 2002).…”