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Nelson, R. Brett; Cummings, Jack A. – Education and Training of the Mentally Retarded, 1981
The study investigated the basic concept attainment of 45 primary-level educable mentally handicapped (EMH) children who had been exposed to two to three years of classroom instruction. The study documented that primary-level EMH children have significant deficits in their understanding of the Boehm basic concepts. (SB)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Mild Mental Retardation, Primary Education
Peer reviewedMartorano, Suzanne Henry; Zentall, Thomas R. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1980
Examined the role played by experience with multidimensional stimuli in the child's ability to separate variables. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedMacLean, Darla J.; Schuler, Maureen – Child Development, 1989
Infants of 14 months of age demonstrated significantly improved understanding of containment as a result of a training intervention in which they played with cans and tubes in their homes for a month. After training, their test scores were similar to those of untrained 20-month-old children. (RH)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedSaltmarsh, Rebecca; And Others – Cognition, 1995
Deceptive box experiments showed that when children see the expected contents before the boxes are changed, it is easier to report their own and a puppet's initial true belief, but also a puppet's current false belief. Results support the "reality masking hypothesis," that facilitation is due to the belief option being linked with a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedTsatsarelis, Charalampos; Ogborn, Jon; Jewitt, Carey; Kress, Gunther – Research in Science Education, 2001
Discusses the process of the construction of entities following a social semiotic approach that enables the use of new analytical tools and describes the rhetoric used in construction. Based on an analysis of the historical formation of the notion of cells by scientists, and analysis of a lesson on the microscopic observation of onion cells.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Cytology, Epistemology
Perone, Sammy; Oakes, Lisa M. – Child Development, 2006
Function has been considered important in numerous literatures in the study of cognitive development, yet little is known about what and how infants learn about function. Five experiments examined what 10-month-old infants (N=80) learn about functions that involve a sound produced when an object is acted on. Infants habituated to a single object…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Cognitive Development, Infants, Experimental Psychology
Cvetek, Slavko – European Journal of Teacher Education, 2008
In this article, some of the ways in which thinking about chaos theory can help teachers and student-teachers to accept uncertainty and randomness as natural conditions in the classroom are considered. Building on some key features of complex systems commonly attributed to chaos theory (e.g. complexity, nonlinearity, sensitivity to initial…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Teacher Education Curriculum, Cognitive Development, Delivery Systems
Pasnak, Robert; Kidd, Julie K.; Gadzichowski, Marinka K.; Gallington, Deborah A.; Saracina, Robin P. – Educational Research, 2008
Background: Children ordinarily begin their formal education at the age when the great majority of them are capable of understanding the role of addition and subtraction in changing number. In determining critical differences they can apply the oddity principle--the first "pure" abstraction that children ever develop--understanding that…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Numeracy, Achievement Tests, Cognitive Development
Tall, David – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2008
This paper focuses on the changes in thinking involved in the transition from school mathematics to formal proof in pure mathematics at university. School mathematics is seen as a combination of visual representations, including geometry and graphs, together with symbolic calculations and manipulations. Pure mathematics in university shifts…
Descriptors: Mathematical Logic, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, College Mathematics
Passig, David – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2009
Children with mental retardation have pronounced difficulties in using cognitive strategies and comprehending abstract concepts--among them, the concept of sequential time (Van-Handel, Swaab, De-Vries, & Jongmans, 2007). The perception of sequential time is generally tested by using scenarios presenting a continuum of actions. The goal of this…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Comparative Analysis, Computer Simulation
Gelman, Susan A.; Bloom, Paul – Cognition, 2007
Generic sentences (such as "Birds lay eggs") are important in that they refer to kinds (e.g., birds as a group) rather than individuals (e.g., the birds in the henhouse). The present set of studies examined aspects of how generic nouns are understood by English speakers. Adults and children (4- and 5-year-olds) were presented with scenarios about…
Descriptors: Semantics, Sentences, Nouns, Cognitive Processes
DiNapoli, Nicholas Paul; And Others – 1980
The Boehm Test of Basic Concepts (BTBC) (Boehm, 1971) was administered to 99 children (ages 7-10) who had been diagnosed as learning disabled and attended special schools in the New York area. It was hypothesized that the learning disabled children would exhibit a delay in the acquisition of the basic concepts, but would display a similar order of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Elementary Education
Mitchell, Edgar D. – Saturday Review (New York 1975), 1975
The author, an astronaut who has visited the moon, focused on the nature of consciousness and the relationship of mind to body that underlies human potential. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Scientific Research
Carlson, Jerry S. – Calif J Educ Res, 1969
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept), Elementary Education
Starkey, David – 1979
Studies of concept formation in infancy have demonstrated that certain experimental settings can elicit spontaneous behavior from infants which has been called "sorting" or "object grouping". This study pursues the issue of early sorting with infants as young as 6 months, and with a broader range of stimuli than has been used…
Descriptors: Classification, Cluster Grouping, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation

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