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Peer reviewedBrown, William H. – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2000
Summarizes Bruer's work, which questions the prevailing emphasis on the first 3 years as most critical to brain development. Notes that the book both elucidates a "blueprint" for mounting an effective public awareness campaign, and provides an excellent synopsis of implications of contemporary neuroscience for early childhood education…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedSteffler, Dorothy J. – Developmental Review, 2001
Addresses how existing theories of implicit cognition may contribute to the understanding of spelling development. Reviews adult literature on implicit memory and implicit learning that may be applied to spelling development. Presents a multilevel model of representational redescription from which to investigate the interrelation of implicit and…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedWellman, Henry M.; Cross, David; Watson, Julanne – Child Development, 2001
Conducted meta-analysis to examine empirical inconsistencies and theoretical controversies concerning false-belief tasks and understanding about mental states. Found that a combined model including age, country of origin, and four task factors accounted for 55 percent of the variance in false-belief performance. Findings are consistent with…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedWellman, Henry M.; Cross, David – Child Development, 2001
Maintains that authors' meta-analytic findings make early competence accounts of theory of mind increasingly unlikely. Asserts that findings argue against executive function expression accounts, including that advocated by Scholl and Leslie (PS532407). Explains that meta-analytic findings directly contradict Scholl and Leslie's predictions…
Descriptors: Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development, Competence
Peer reviewedBehrend, Douglas A.; Scofield, Jason; Kleinknecht, Erica E. – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Examined in 2 studies 2- to 4-year-olds' learning of novel words and novel facts and extension of the words and facts to additional exemplars. Found that children extended the novel word to more category members than they extended the novel fact. By age 2, children observe extendibility of novel count nouns but are uncertain about extendibility of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Language Processing
Peer reviewedHenry, Sue Ellen – Educational Theory, 2001
Exposes the structural-functionalist roots of Kohlberg's theory of moral development, questioning the application of Kohlberg's ideas in the classroom, reviewing Kohlberg's Just Community model, examining Durkheim's and Dreeben's theories and their similarity to Kohlberg's moral theory, critiquing Kohlberg's conception of the Just Community…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Educational Psychology, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedWainryb, Cecilia; Shaw, Leigh A.; Laupa, Marta; Smith, Ken R. – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Examined third- and seventh-graders' and college students' thinking regarding different types of disagreements. Found that participants' thinking was constrained by the realm and form of the disagreement. At all ages, participants judged some disagreements acceptable and others unacceptable, described disagreements based on different attributes,…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Age Differences, Beliefs, Children
Peer reviewedWaite-Stupiansky, Sandra; Findlay, Marcia – Educational Forum, 2001
Review of research on recess shows how its presence or absence affects children's brain development, health and physical development, attention, memory, social and emotional adjustment, language development, and classroom behavior. Despite demonstrated benefits, recess is endangered by pressures on schools to increase achievement. (Contains 52…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Language Acquisition
Richmond, Jenny; DeBoer, Tracy – Infant and Child Development, 2006
Age-related changes in representational flexibility are a characteristic feature of declarative memory development. The authors suggest that a qualitative shift in the nature of infants' memory representations accounts for increasing memory flexibility with age. We will argue that a comprehensive theory of declarative memory development must (1)…
Descriptors: Memory, Cognitive Development, Change, Age Differences
Leavens, David A. – Infant and Child Development, 2006
What capabilities are required for an organism to evince an "explicit" understanding of gaze as a mentalistic phenomenon? One possibility is that mentalistic interpretations of gaze, like concepts of unseen, supernatural beings, are culturally-specific concepts, acquired through cultural learning. These abstract concepts may either require a…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Infants, Cognitive Development, Neurological Organization
Peer reviewedEverall, Robin D.; Bostik, Katherine E.; Paulson, Barbara L. – Adolescence (San Diego): an international quarterly devoted to the physiological, psychological, psychiatric, sociological, and educational aspects of the second decade of human life, 2005
Adolescence is a developmental transition period during which there are profound transformations in emotional, cognitive, and behavioral systems. Despite being a time of rapid development and increasing rates of suicidality, limited research has examined possible interrelationships. Through the use of a case study, this paper illustrates the role…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Adolescents, Suicide, Case Studies
Muller, Jens – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2005
Background: When developing a domain-specific academic self-concept, students are not restricted to social comparisons; they may also make temporal or dimensional comparisons. Aims: The main purpose of this study was to examine whether these different types of comparison trigger paradoxical effects of praise and criticism in the sense described by…
Descriptors: Grade 9, Inferences, Elementary School Students, Criticism
Edwards, M. Craig – Journal of Vocational Education Research, 2004
The "coin of the realm" in education today is student achievement, its measure, and its relationship to school accountability. An almost singular emphasis is placed on student achievement in "core" academic areas. The constructs of cognitive learning, student achievement, and instructional approach in agricultural education have been studied by…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Accountability, Academic Achievement, Agricultural Education
Peer reviewedWilliams, Kathleen – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance (JOPERD), 2004
Through the study of motor development, the physically educated person will understand that individuals develop at their own rate and require both time and practice to acquire new motor skills. The physically educated person needs to know about motor development in order to monitor his or her own change and become an independent learner.…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Motor Development, Psychomotor Skills, Cognitive Development
Pine, Karen J.; Lufkin, Nicola; Messer, David – Developmental Psychology, 2004
This research extends the range of domains within which children's gestures are found to play an important role in learning. The study involves children learning about balance, and the authors locate children's gestures within a relevant model of cognitive development--the representational redescription model (A. Karmiloff-Smith, 1992). The speech…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Learning Readiness, Nonverbal Communication, Children

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