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Peer reviewedColeman, Mary Ruth – Gifted Child Today Magazine, 1995
This article describes the use of problem-based learning (PBL) with gifted students, in which the focus of the curriculum is "ill-structured" problems. Particular advantages of PBL with these students include effectiveness in teaching the art of problem finding and solving, active learning, higher order thinking skills, and using interdisciplinary…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Educational Methods, Elementary Secondary Education, Gifted
Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – 1994
In this paper four programs are described in which children learn multidigit number concepts and operations with understanding: (1) the Supporting Ten-Structured Thinking projects, (2) the Conceptually Based Instruction project, (3) Cognitively Guided Instruction projects, and (4) the Problem Centered Mathematics Project. The diversity in these…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Cognitive Development, Demonstration Programs, Mathematics Instruction
Chernobilsky, Ellina; DaCosta, Maria Carolina; Hmelo-Silver, Cindy E. – Instructional Science: An International Journal of Learning and Cognition, 2004
A sociocultural view of learning proposes that learning involves becoming enculturated into a community of practice. A step along the way is learning to use the specialized language of such a community, as language is a crucial tool that regulates participation, mediates cognition and plays a central role in the development of thought.…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Problem Based Learning, Language Usage, Jargon
Laff, Ned Scott – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2005
This chapter argues that liberal learning can be transformative and foster students' intellectual and ethical development only if we consider its development underpinnings and pedagogic strategies that illustrate that the skills of academic inquiry are the skills of personal development. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Student Development, Cognitive Development, Ethics

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