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Symons, Douglas K.; Fossum, Kristin-Lee M.; Collins, T. B. Kate – Social Development, 2006
There is considerable interest in the role of mental state language in theory of mind development. This study examines cognitive and desire state discourse of 43 mothers during play interactions with their two-year-old children and theory of mind as indicated by a battery of false belief tasks around the age of five. Desire state comments of…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Play, Socioeconomic Status, Mothers
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Blume, Warren T. – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2004
Lennox-Gastaut (L-G) syndrome is an intractable generalized epilepsy of childhood onset, associated with spike waves at a slow rate and paroxysmal fast activity. These epileptiform discharge patterns are thought to reflect excessive neocortical excitability and arise from neuronal and synaptic features peculiar to the immature central nervous…
Descriptors: Seizures, Brain, Social Isolation, Cognitive Development
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Johnson, Genevieve – E-Learning, 2006
The number of children and adolescents accessing the Internet as well as the amount of time online are steadily increasing. The most common online activities include playing video games, accessing web sites, and communicating via chat rooms, email, and instant messaging. A theoretical framework for understanding the effects of Internet use on…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Video Games, Cognitive Processes, Internet
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Griffin, Sharon – Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 2004
Number sense is easy to recognize but difficult to define and hence, to teach. In this article, number sense is defined in terms of the knowledge known to underline it, as identified in cognitive developmental theory and research. A preK-2 mathematics program, called Number Worlds, that was specifically developed to teach this knowledge is…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Early Childhood Education, Numeracy, Learning Theories
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Zygmunt-Fillwalk, Eva; Bilello, Teresa Evanko – Childhood Education, 2005
This article discusses the issue of schools limiting the opportunities for children's physical, cognitive, social-emotional, and creative development that recess affords. Red Rover, hopscotch, jump rope, chase, telling secrets, hanging out, making friends, losing friends--these familiar pursuits of childhood recess are vividly memorable. While…
Descriptors: Childrens Rights, Academic Achievement, Elementary Schools, Child Development
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Poehlmann, Julie – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2005
Despite the dramatic increase in incarcerated mothers that has occurred in the past decades, there is a paucity of family research focusing on the children affected by maternal imprisonment. The present study investigated family environments and intellectual outcomes in 60 children between the ages of 2 and 7 years during their mothers'…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Caregivers, Mothers, Parent Child Relationship
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Choe, Katherine S.; Keil, Frank C.; Bloom, Paul – Developmental Science, 2005
Two studies explored children's understanding of how the presence of conflicting mental states in a single mind can lead people to act so as to subvert their own desires. Study 1 analyzed explanations by children (4-7 years) and adults of behaviors arising from this sort of "Ulysses conflict" and compared them with their understanding of…
Descriptors: Conflict, Cognitive Development, Adults, Child Development
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Barco, Angel; Kandel, Eric R.; Gordon, Barbara; Lickey, Marvin E.; Suzuki, Seigo; Pham, Tony A.; Graham, Sarah J. – Learning & Memory, 2004
The adult cerebral cortex can adapt to environmental change. Using monocular deprivation as a paradigm, we find that rapid experience-dependent plasticity exists even in the mature primary visual cortex. However, adult cortical plasticity differs from developmental plasticity in two important ways. First, the effect of adult, but not juvenile…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Animals, Visual Stimuli, Science Experiments
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King, Patricia M.; VanHecke, JoNes R. – About Campus, 2006
Despite the importance accorded to helping students make conceptual connections and arrive at a more sophisticated understanding of how ideas, concepts, theories, and explanations interact with and inform one another, educators have few maps to help them describe the process by which students learn to make these connections. Through skill theory,…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Services, Context Effect, Psychological Patterns, Concept Mapping
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Kuntay, Aylin C.; Ozyurek, Asli – Journal of Child Language, 2006
Pragmatic development requires the ability to use linguistic forms, along with non-verbal cues, to focus an interlocutor's attention on a referent during conversation. We investigate the development of this ability by examining how the use of demonstratives is learned in Turkish, where a three-way demonstrative system ("bu,"…
Descriptors: Cues, Child Development, Foreign Countries, Attention Span
Fong, Ng Swee – Journal of Science and Mathematics Education in Southeast Asia, 2006
This paper describes an activity which attempts to change the discourse of a mathematics classroom with the specific intent to help children who may have difficulties with mathematics and ways of communicating. Ten 8-year old children in the Learning Support Programme were engaged in an open-ended geometric task. In this paper a brief description…
Descriptors: Animals, Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Communication Skills
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Kail, Robert V.; Miller, Carol A. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2006
As children develop, they process information more rapidly. The primary aim of this study was to determine whether processing speed in the language domain develops at the same rate as global processing speed. A second aim was to determine the stability of processing speed throughout childhood and adolescence. Children (N = 116) were tested on 10…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Cognitive Processes, Language Processing
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Meeusen-van de Kerkhof, Rianne; van Bommel, Hanneke; van de Wouw, Werner; Maaskant, Marian – Journal of Policy and Practice in Intellectual Disabilities, 2006
The authors examine the way in which people with intellectual disability (ID) handle death and mourning, and note that the way in which death and bereavement are being experienced depends--among other things--upon the intellectual and socio-emotional age of the individual. The authors used the theories formulated by Piaget (cognitive development),…
Descriptors: Grief, Mental Retardation, Social Development, Cognitive Development
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Daniel, Marie-France; Doudin, Pierre-Andre; Pons, Francisco – Journal of Peace Education, 2006
The ultimate goal of peace education is "to minimise and eventually eliminate various forms of violence through consciousness raising, vision, and action" (Brantmeier, E. (2003) Peace Pedagogy: exposing and integrating peace education in teacher education. Paper presented at the "Association for Teacher Educators" meeting, p. 6). Our position is…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Psychologists, Preschool Children
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Schoner, Gregor; Thelen, Esther – Psychological Review, 2006
Much of what psychologists know about infant perception and cognition is based on habituation, but the process itself is still poorly understood. Here the authors offer a dynamic field model of infant visual habituation, which simulates the known features of habituation, including familiarity and novelty effects, stimulus intensity effects, and…
Descriptors: Infants, Habituation, Psychologists, Visual Perception
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