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Flack, Jerry – Understanding Our Gifted, 2001
This article discusses how creative thinking can be encouraged in students through such classic tools as brainstorming and the productive thinking elements of fluency, flexibility, originality, and elaboration. It describes how fairy tales can be used to foster these thinking skills and suggests classroom activities. (Contains two references.) (CR)
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Development, Creative Development
Shaklee, Beverly – Understanding Our Gifted, 2003
One of the most important experiences in a child's life begins when he starts formal school, most often at age 5. Going to kindergarten is thrilling and sometimes scary but always an adventure. At this time, children come together from all walks of life; all types of families; at all levels of development; and with a vast array of skills,…
Descriptors: Gifted, Cognitive Development, Young Children, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedJackson, Aurora P.; Scheines, Richard – Social Work Research, 2005
Using data from a sample of 178 single black mothers and their young children who were ages three to five at time 1 and ages five to eight at time 2, this study examined the links between and among low-wage employment, mothers' self-efficacy beliefs, depressive symptoms, and a constellation of parenting behaviors in the preschool years to…
Descriptors: Parenting Skills, One Parent Family, Self Efficacy, Fathers
Pelletier, Janette; Astington, Janet Wilde – Early Education and Development, 2004
This study reports on an analysis of the relation between kindergarten children's developing theory of mind and their understanding of characters' actions and consciousness in story narrative, based on Bruner's (1986) notion of the dual landscapes of action and consciousness. Wordless picture books were used to model these two aspects of…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Picture Books, Language Aptitude, Cognitive Development
Philip, William; Botschuijver, Sabine – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2004
Adult and child L2 acquisition of syntax-semantics interface phenomena must be compared with monolingual L1 acquisition of the same phenomena in order to assess the possible effects of interference and transfer. However, this "L1A touchstone" can also be misleading because non-grammatical mechanisms that interact with such interface phenomena may…
Descriptors: Monolingualism, Linguistic Performance, Linguistic Competence, Language Patterns
Long, Mike – International Review of Applied Linguistics in Language Teaching (IRAL), 2005
While almost all observers agree that young children, older children, and adults differ both in initial rate of acquisition and in the levels of ultimate attainment typically achieved, they continue to disagree over whether the observed patterns are a function of nurture or nature. Is it simply that older starters "do not" do as well because they…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Children, Adults, Age Differences
Pizzolato, Jane Elizabeth – Journal of College Student Development, 2005
Through examination of 613 students' narratives about self-selected important decisions, I investigated the student and situation characteristics related to provocation and use of self authored ways of knowing. The findings gesture toward both particular skills students may need to develop in order to self-author, as well as suggest that movement…
Descriptors: Investigations, College Students, Portfolio Assessment, Cognitive Processes
Oppenheimer, Louis – Journal of Adolescence, 2006
The hypothesis guiding this study stated that just world beliefs (i.e., the belief that the world is orderly and just) are primitive beliefs that lose their importance across age as they become replaced by more sophisticated forms of reasoning enabling individuals to handle a world that is neither orderly nor just. In addition, just world beliefs…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, College Students, World Views, Justice
Paananen, Pirkko – Music Education Research, 2006
In the statistical and transcriptional analyses reported in this exploratory study, original rhythms of 6-11-year-old children (N=36) were examined. The hypotheses were based on a new model of musical development, and tested empirically using non-pitch rhythmic improvisation in a MIDI-environment. Several representational types were found in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Children, Music, Multivariate Analysis
Kagitcibasi, Cigdem; Goksen, Fatos; Gulgoz, Sami – Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 2005
This study addresses the impact of functional adult literacy on the empowerment of women in the absence of formal schooling. It examines whether the effects of functional literacy are exclusively content specific or whether there are gains going beyond the obvious benefits and extending to other spheres of everyday functioning, such as…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Program Effectiveness, Foreign Countries, Females
Howley, Mary; Howe, Christine – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Recent research using theory-of-mind tasks has rekindled interest in the possibility that social interaction makes a significant contribution to cognitive development. It is proposed here that this contribution may be most pronounced with phenomena that, like belief or affective states, are internal and abstract. A more modest contribution is…
Descriptors: Deafness, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Cognitive Development
Montgomery, Derek E.; Lightner, Melisa – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Four studies examined 3- and 4-year-olds' ability to judge accurately whether they acted intentionally. Children self-initiated action to attain an outcome, or their arm was moved by the experimenter to create an outcome. In Experiment 3, children in both age groups accurately claimed they were agents of self-guided action but not of passive…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Cognitive Development, Young Children, Experimental Psychology
Siegler, Robert S. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2004
Interest in U-shaped development has itself undergone a U-shaped progression. Twenty-five years ago, interest in U-shaped development was high. This interest was evident at a 1978 conference in Tel Aviv on "U-shaped Behavioral Growth" that resulted in the publication of a book of the same title 4 years later (Strauss, 1982). The breadth…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Individual Development, Cognitive Development, Child Development
Parlakian, Rebecca – Zero to Three (J), 2004
For infants and toddlers, education and care are "two sides of the same coin." The author briefly reviews current research on the importance of relationships to cognitive development and early language and literacy. Instructional strategies that are most appropriate to the early years include "intentionality" and "scaffolding." Intentionality…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Emergent Literacy, Cognitive Development
Bering, Jesse M.; Blasi, Carlos Hernandez; Bjorklund, David F. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2005
Children aged from 4;10 to 12;9 attending either a Catholic school or a public, secular school in an eastern Spanish city observed a puppet show in which a mouse was eaten by an alligator. Children were then asked questions about the dead mouse's biological and psychological functioning. The pattern of results generally replicated that obtained…
Descriptors: Catholic Schools, Puppetry, Catholics, Cognitive Ability

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