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Peer reviewedLampert, Magdalene – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1984
Described is a project which explored how elementary teachers' intuitive knowledge (the common sense sort of information built from personal experimentation on the physical environment in contrast to formal knowledge learned in school) affects their educational practices. (RM)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Practices, Educational Research, Elementary Education
Bamberger, Jeanne; And Others – 1981
This project examined three hypotheses: (1) teachers can learn to make explicit their own intuitive knowledge as it relates to specific matters and their teaching practice; (2) once a teacher has gained insight into her own knowledge, she can learn to coordinate it with the privileged descriptions of subject matters she is expected to teach; and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers, Faculty Development
Peer reviewedKaiser, Mary Kister; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1986
Examines the development of intuitive theories of motion among college students and children between the ages of 4 and 12. School-aged children made more erroneous predictions on the path a ball takes upon exiting a curved tube than preschoolers, kindergarteners, and college students. Results related to the "growth error." (Author/BB)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, College Students, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedIchimura, Takahisa – Peabody Journal of Education, 1993
Examines teacher's use of their personal knowledge and qualities, such as trust, acceptance, tolerance, or sympathy toward the learner, as a means of helping students in teacher education develop and use their personal knowledge. The article focuses on the element of uncertainty and its effect on the teacher student relationship. (GLR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Intuition
Resnick, Lauren B. – 1991
This paper proposes a theory that can account for differences between everyday and formal mathematics knowledge and a set of processes by which informal knowledge is transformed into formal mathematics. After an introduction, the paper is developed in five sections. The first section lays out the nature of informal, everyday mathematics knowledge.…
Descriptors: Addition, Early Experience, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics
Schultz, Andrew E. – 1998
A study determined whether sensate and intuitive learners differed in their capacity to recall and recognize images given two different times of exposure. The 158 subjects--elementary school technology teachers in Southern California--put themselves into 2 groups of 80 and 78 by registering for a first or second session of the Elementary Summer…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Cognitive Style, Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers
Peer reviewedPerry, Bruce; Obenauf, Patricia – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1987
Reports on a study which investigated the order of acquisition of intuitive notions of qualitative speed. Results indicated that an array of prerequisites, equivalent, and independent relationships existed among the tasks administered. Confirmed the evolution of reasoning for notions of qualitative speed found by Piaget. (Author/TW)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Developmental Stages, Elementary Education, Elementary School Science


