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Balas, Benjamin; Weigelt, Sarah; Koldewyn, Kami – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2023
Adult observers are sensitive to the configuration of facial features within a face, able to distinguish between relative differences in feature spacing, and detecting deviations from typical facial appearance. How does the representation of the typical configuration of facial features develop? While there is a great deal of work describing…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Adults, Children, Freehand Drawing
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Andersson, Johanna; Löfgren, Ragnhild; Tibell, Lena A. E. – Journal of Biological Education, 2020
This paper presents a study of children's ideas of the body's internal structure. Children between four and 13 years (N = 170) individually produced drawings. During each drawing session the children explained their drawings to a facilitator and added written labels either by themselves or, if they were too young to write, with the facilitator's…
Descriptors: Human Body, Freehand Drawing, Anatomy, Science Education
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Mannathoko, Magdeline Chilalu; Mamvuto, Attwell – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2019
Drawing is one of children's modes of communication which has recently excited academic inquiry in non-Western cultures. It is the means through which children express their fears, desires, anxieties and conception of phenomena. This study investigated drawings by four- to ten-year-old Botswana children in response to the human figure as an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Freehand Drawing, Children, Human Body
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Malanchini, Margherita; Tosto, Maria G.; Garfield, Victoria; Dirik, Aysegul; Czerwik, Adrian; Arden, Rosalind; Malykh, Sergey; Kovas, Yulia – Child Development, 2016
The study examined the etiology of individual differences in early drawing and of its longitudinal association with school mathematics. Participants (N = 14,760), members of the Twins Early Development Study, were assessed on their ability to draw a human figure, including number of features, symmetry, and proportionality. Human figure drawing was…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Preschool Education, Freehand Drawing, Mathematics Skills
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Martínez-Bello, Vladimir E.; Martínez-Bello, Judith T. – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2017
The messages conveyed by visual representations in the early childhood education (ECE) environment are critical to ensuring the success of inclusive practices. Given that anti-bias education permeates and affects everything which takes place in ECE institutions, the challenge for early childhood educators is to think creatively about how classroom…
Descriptors: Human Body, Early Childhood Education, Visual Stimuli, Inclusion
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Riggs, Kevin J.; Jolley, Richard P.; Simpson, Andrew – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2013
We investigated the role of inhibitory control in young children's human figure drawing. We used the Bear-Dragon task as a measure of inhibitory control and used the classification system devised by Cox and Parkin to measure the development of human figure drawing. We tested 50 children aged between 40 and 64 months. Regression analysis showed…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Classification, Young Children, Freehand Drawing
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Bartoszeck, Amauri Betini; Machado, Danielle Zagonel; Amann-Gainotti, Merete – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2011
The objective of this exploratory study is to characterize by means of drawings if the developmental patterns in the graphic representation of organ and organ systems progresses related to age of participants. Secondly, whether there is an integration of sex organs into the internal body image. The drawings representing the inside of the body in…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Adolescents, Scoring, Human Body
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Prokop, Pavol; Fancovicova, Jana; Tunnicliffe, Sue Dale – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2009
Children's knowledge about human anatomy can be examined through several different ways. Making a drawing of the internal features of the human body has been frequently used in recent studies. However, there might be a serious difference in results obtained from a general instruction to students ("What you think is inside your body") and…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Human Body, Comparative Analysis, Teaching Methods
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Gross, Thomas F. – Journal of Genetic Psychology, 2007
The author studied children's (aged 5-16 years) and young adults' (aged 18-22 years) perception and use of facial features to discriminate the age of mature adult faces. In Experiment 1, participants rated the age of unaltered and transformed (eyes, nose, eyes and nose, and whole face blurred) adult faces (aged 20-80 years). In Experiment 2,…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Young Children, Young Adults, Older Adults
Willatts, Peter; Dougal, Shonagh – 1990
In an investigation of causes of the disproportionate relation between head and body in children's drawings of the human figure, 160 children of 3-10 years of age produced drawings of a man viewed from the front and from the back. It was expected that if planning to include facial features increased the size of the head children drew, then heads…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries
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Tunnicliffe, Sue Dale – Primary Science Review, 2004
In England the National Curriculum does not specifically mention the excretory system at key stages 1 and 2. Research by Reiss and Tunnicliffe (2001, 2002) has shown that children's knowledge of the organs and organ systems in their bodies increases with age but remains incomplete, even at maturity, unless they specialise in studying biology. The…
Descriptors: Biology, Foreign Countries, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
Deluca, Paolo – 1997
This research compared two methods used to investigate the knowledge of internal body parts by children ages 4 to 9 years. Subjects were 50 Italian children: 18 preschoolers, 21 first graders, and 11 second or third graders. Children performed two tasks, a Drawing Task in which they drew on the outline of a human figure all the body parts they…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Anatomy, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis