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Jessica H. Hunt; Kristi Martin – Learning Disability Quarterly, 2024
Productive engagement in fractional reasoning is essential for abstracting fundamental algebraic concepts vital to college and career success. Yet, data suggest students with learning disabilities (LDs), in particular, display pervasive shortfalls in learning and mastering fraction content. We argue that shortfalls in understanding are in fact…
Descriptors: Fractions, Mathematics Skills, Thinking Skills, Algebra
Clarissa A. Thompson; Jennifer M. Taber; Pooja G. Sidney; Charles J. Fitzsimmons; Marta K. Mielicki; Percival G. Matthews; Erika A. Schemmel; Nicolle Simonovic; Jeremy L. Foust; Pallavi Aurora; David J. Disabato; T. H. Stanley Seah; Lauren K. Schiller; Karin G. Coifman – Grantee Submission, 2021
At the onset of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) global pandemic, our interdisciplinary team hypothesized that a mathematical misconception--whole number bias (WNB)--contributed to beliefs that COVID-19 was less fatal than the flu. We created a brief online educational intervention for adults, leveraging evidence-based cognitive science…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Cognitive Processes, Logical Thinking
Peer reviewedEwens, Thomas – Design for Arts in Education, 1989
Compares science and art as modes of reflective activity in order to remedy confusion concerning the notion of disciplined-based art education. Referring to the work of John Macmurray, the author suggests that there is a discipline unique to the arts that differs from the disciplines proper to intellectual modes of reflection. (KO)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Affective Behavior, Art Education, Cognitive Processes
Grotelueschen, Arden D. – 1972
After opening with a 13-page review of the literature, the document's main emphasis is on the three experiments included in this report. The specific rationale, procedures, and results of the three studies comprise the major portion of the document. The general purpose of Experiment 1 was to ascertain the effects of prior relevant subject matter…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adult Learning, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedTzeng, Oliver C. S. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 1977
A new method for separating affective and denotative meaning subsystems in semantic differential ratings of any homogeneous concept domain is developed and illustrated using personality ratings data. Possible applications of this method are discussed. (Author/JKS)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes, Factor Structure
Peer reviewedJohnson, Ronald W.; And Others – Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1995
Tested Cooper and Fazio's dissonance model. Subjects made arguments that were consistent or inconsistent with their attitudes and were provided feedback about consequences. Attitude-change effect only occurred when behaviors were both inconsistent and resulted in aversive consequences. Results suggest that cognitive inconsistency may be necessary…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Affective Behavior, Attitude Change, Attitudes
Peer reviewedEccles, John C. – Teachers College Record, 1981
Human beings must realize the great unknowns in the material makeup and operation of the brain, in the relationship of brain to mind, in the creative imagination, and in the uniqueness of the psyche. The essential feature of the dualist-interaction theory is that mind and body are independent entities which somehow interact. (JN)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Mowbray, Carol T. – 1974
This paper presents a theoretical and empirical analysis of Piagetian and psychoanalytic theories of infancy to establish the developmental relationships between cognition and affect. Theoretical points of similarity and dissimilarity are cited. Relevant reasearch studies (Bell, Gouin-Decarie, Fraiberg) are reviewed in an attempt to resolve…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Greeley, Andrew M. – 1970
The suggestion that academic professions ought to be treated as games and that graduate school training should consist of preparation in gamesmanship is in this author's viewpoint, perfectly in keeping with the epistomological revolution. The literature of the 1960's which criticized the scientific world-view is reviewed. Three positions that…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes, College Faculty

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