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Ledger, George W.; Ryan, Ellen Bouchard – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1982
The effectiveness of training a semantic integration strategy for recall of pictograph sequences and the generalization of the strategy to a related oral sentence task were examined in 60 kindergarten prereaders. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Generalization, Kindergarten Children, Memory, Primary Education
Maguire, Gregory – Horn Book Magazine, 1981
Suggests that adult interest in children's books results from a sense of responsibility and love for children, an urge to assist and instruct them, a desire to entertain them, and, most of all, from the memories adults have of their own childhoods. (AEA)
Descriptors: Adults, Books, Childrens Literature, Influences
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Day, Elmer S., Jr. – Art Education, 1979
The author partially describes a few of the immanent qualities of dreaming imagery and metaphor. The concept of the ineluctable modality is introduced to illustrate the spontaneous synthesizing of cognitive and noncognitive elements. A short dream excerpt is shared to clarify the pervasive contrapuntallike depth of dreaming imagery. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Imagery, Memory, Metaphors
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Brown, R. Michael; And Others – Child Development, 1981
Three experiments examined the notion that children's primacy and recency in the probe-type pictorial memory task are related to the spatial distinctiveness of the "leftmost" and "rightmost" items presented. Data suggest that preschoolers and older children alike are able to code temporal order along with the corresponding…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Memory, Primacy Effect, Young Children
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Johnson, Marcia K.; Raye, Carol L. – Psychological Review, 1981
Reality monitoring concerns the ability to distinguish knowledge that an individual has produced internally (through reasoning, imagination, etc.) from knowledge that was obtained through experience (or "externally"). A model of reality monitoring is proposed and discussed. (JKS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Cues, Memory
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Mast, Vicki K.; And Others – Child Development, 1980
Tested the persistence over 24 hours of reward-expectation habits in infants. A comparison was made between the responses of two groups of infants (infants with a history of reinforcement with large, complex mobiles, and infants with no prior history of reinforcement with mobiles) on a task reinforced by a small mobile. (Author/SS)
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Expectation, Habit Formation, Infants
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Maisto, Albert A.; Sipe, Suzanne – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1980
A choice reaction time experiment was performed in order to assess the information processing characteristics of 12-year-old reading-disabled children. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Evaluation Methods, Memory
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Hartley, James; And Others – Journal of Educational Research, 1980
In this investigation, underlined words in a text were recalled both immediately and in the long term significantly better by students who had studied the text, and this result was not obtained at the expense of other items of information in the text. (JD)
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Memory, Recall (Psychology), Reinforcement
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Vrana, Francois; Pihl, R. O. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1980
Immediate recall measures on one or both types of stimuli were recorded under two conditions: (1) in which stimuli were close together and (2) in which they were separate. Results indicated that normal children selectively attended significantly better than LD children under Condition 1 but not in Condition 2, in which both groups were equal.…
Descriptors: Attention, Elementary Education, Learning Disabilities, Memory
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Burger, Agnes Lin; Blackman, Leonard S. – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1979
The accuracy of memory span (digit span) estimation by 160 educable mentally retarded Ss at two different mental age levels (8 and 11 years) was assessed, and the effects of explicit strategy training, generalized instructions, and no training on recall performance and apportionment of study time were compared. (Author/DLS)
Descriptors: Memory, Mental Retardation, Mild Mental Retardation, Recall (Psychology)
Quinn, Cathleen E. – Academic Therapy, 1980
The author offers 16 sight word "tricks" that children can use to remember the spelling of 25 common sight words. Materials and techniques for teaching sight words are also suggested. (SBH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Memory, Sight Vocabulary, Spelling
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Bartlett, James C.; Santrock, John W. – Child Development, 1979
Reports an experiment with five-year-old children which tested the hypothesis that a change in affect between input and test interferes with performance in a nominally noncued free recall test but not with performance on a cued recall test. (JMB)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cues, Memory, Preschool Children
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Reese, Hayne W. – Human Development, 1976
It is argued that the dialectical model of memory development seems more promising than behavoristic, information processing and contextual models. (MS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Literature Reviews, Memory
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Meacham, John A. – Human Development, 1976
A dialectical approach to memories and memory abilities requires attention to relations of reciprocal causality both between the individual and society and within the individual. The challenge of the dialectical approach is to persist in insisting on change. (MS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Memory, Research Methodology, Social Influences
King, David R. W.; Anderson, John R. – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1976
Subjects memorized subject-verb-object propositions and then judged whether verb-object probes appeared in the same proposition. Reaction times and error rates were observed. Data indicate that activation spreads from probe concepts in parallel through the propositional network. A guessing model for errors was constructed. (CHK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Memorization, Memory, Recall (Psychology)
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