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Becker, Joe – Human Development, 2008
Philosophers and scientists seeking to conceptualize consciousness, and subjective experience in particular, have focused on sensation and perception, and have emphasized binding--how a percept holds together. Building on a constructivist approach to conception centered on separistic-holistic complexes incorporating multiple levels of abstraction,…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Concept Formation, Abstract Reasoning, Intention
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Wells, Gordon – Human Development, 2007
Both Vygotsky, a psychologist, and Halliday, a social linguist, argue for the central role of language in human development. Language is the principal mode of meaning making; it mediates both the communication through which thinking with others is made possible and also the inner speech through which individual thinking is brought under conscious…
Descriptors: Inner Speech (Subvocal), Language Role, Cognitive Development, Classroom Communication
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Vosniadou, Stella – Human Development, 2007
In order to understand the advanced, scientific concepts of the various disciplines, students cannot rely on the simple memorization of facts. They must learn how to restructure their naive, intuitive theories based on everyday experience and lay culture. In other words, they must undergo profound conceptual change. This type of conceptual change…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Student Motivation, Classroom Environment, Constructivism (Learning)
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Becker, Joe – Human Development, 2004
Constructivist theory must choose between the hypothesis that felt perturbation drives cognitive development (the priority of felt perturbation) and the hypothesis that the particular process that eventually produces new cognitive structures first produces felt perturbation (the continuity of process). There is ambivalence in Piagetian theory…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Consciousness Raising, Cognitive Structures
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Hammack, Phillip L. – Human Development, 2005
Through the application of life course theory to the study of sexual orientation, this paper specifies a new paradigm for research on human sexual orientation that seeks to reconcile divisions among biological, social science, and humanistic paradigms. Recognizing the historical, social, and cultural relativity of human development, this paradigm…
Descriptors: Models, Sexual Orientation, Sexual Identity, Individual Development