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Peer reviewedDemetriou, Andreas – Learning and Instruction, 1998
Outlines a general model about the dynamic organization and development of the mind and draws the implications of this model for learning and instruction by presenting 10 postulates about the organization of the mind and 1 general postulate about the dynamic relations between systems of the mind and the mind and education. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Psychology, Developmental Psychology, Knowledge Representation
Peer reviewedKrascum, Ruth M.; Andrews, Sally – Child Development, 1998
Two experiments examined 4- to 5-year-olds' acquisition of family-resemblance categories for fictitious animals. Results showed that children who performed theory-guided learning were more successful at making feature/category associations than children who performed similarity-guided learning and categorized attributes significantly better than…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Performance Factors
Peer reviewedWaxman, Sandra R.; Lynch, Elizabeth B.; Casey, K. Lyman; Baer, Leslie – Developmental Psychology, 1997
Three experiments examine how preschoolers partition their basic level categories to form subordinate level categories and whether these have inductive potential. Results suggest that contrastive information promotes the emergence of subordinate categories as a basis of inductive inference and newly established subordinate categories can retain…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Induction, Inferences
Peer reviewedLord, Thomas R. – Contemporary Education, 1998
Discusses the difference between traditional classrooms, where teachers just disseminate information from textbooks, and constructivist-based, student-centered classrooms, where in the acquisition of knowledge, mental energies are expended by both the deliverer and the receiver. The end result of a constructivist classroom is a learning…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Elementary Secondary Education, Science Education
Peer reviewedWakeley, Ann; Rivera, Susan; Langer, Jonas – Child Development, 2000
Used Wynn's (1992) procedure in 3 experiments to test 5-month-olds' looking-time reactions to correct and incorrect results of simple addition and subtraction transformations. Found non-systematic evidence of either imprecise or precise adding and subtracting in young infants. Results suggest that infants' reactions to displays of adding and…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Development, Infant Behavior, Infants
Peer reviewedSamuelson, Larissa K.; Smith, Linda B. – Child Development, 2000
Four experiments investigated 3-year-olds' understanding of the differential importance of shape for categorizing solid objects. Found that they categorized rigid and deformable objects differently in a non-naming task and knew that material was important for deformable items and shape for rigid items. In two naming tasks, they generalized names…
Descriptors: Attention, Classification, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis
Peer reviewedDiesendruck, Gil – Developmental Psychology, 2001
Investigated whether Brazilian 4-year-olds held essentialist beliefs about animal categories. Found that middle class and poor children were equally likely to interpret labels as referring to mutually exclusive animal categories, and more likely to accept a common label for animals sharing internal properties than superficial properties,…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Children, Classification, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedSullivan, Kate; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1994
Children from preschool through second grade were told four stories and were asked questions about the stories that were designed to elicit their understanding of second order mental states. Found that 90% of kindergartners and 40% of preschoolers were able to attribute second order false beliefs. (BC)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedO'Halloran, Colleen M.; Altmaier, Elizabeth M. – Journal of Counseling & Development, 1996
A review of studies on death awareness among children who are healthy, chronically ill, and terminally ill reveals that children with life-threatening diseases demonstrate increased understanding of death. In contrast, healthy and chronically ill children appear to require certain age, cognitive development level, or intelligence thresholds to…
Descriptors: Age, Children, Chronic Illness, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedPlumert, Jodie M. – Cognitive Development, 1996
Investigated preschoolers' responses to ambiguous descriptions of location. Ambiguous ("in one of the bags") descriptions caused longer search latencies in four- and five-year olds than nonambiguous descriptions ("in the bag by the chair"). The reverse was true for three-year olds. Results suggest that changes in information…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Ambiguity, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedFireman, Gary – Cognitive Development, 1996
Distinguishes the values of quantitative increments and qualitative shifts with regard to problem solving. Subjects were 136 children ranging from 6 through 8 years and were presented with the standard 3-disc problem to resolve in 3 minutes. Results indicated that qualitative shifts in children's representation of problem space are a crucial…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Critical Thinking, Metropolitan Areas
Peer reviewedCurtner-Smith, Matthew D. – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation and Dance, 1996
Explains how teachers of students in grades four through six can use the Teaching Games for Understanding Approach and incorporate games invention into the physical education curriculum. A three-step model is proposed: selection and modification of games; teaching games with an understanding approach; and student invention of games. Summaries of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Creativity, Games
Peer reviewedForman, George – Childhood Education, 1996
Presents case study of a child trying to represent and understand the water wheel as an example of knowledge construction from the constructivism perspective. Focuses on how his understanding of physical perspective taking advances through conflicts in the use of different media (telling, drawing, paper, clay, or wood model) and how the Reggio…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Preschool Children
Peer reviewedChaill, Christine; Silvern, Steven B. – Childhood Education, 1996
Examines practice play, symbolic play, games with rules, and constructions and their relation to Piaget's active education, the intentional social process of constructing understanding involving interest, experimentation, and cooperation within the play context. Recommendations for identifying the type of knowledge being constructed (physical,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Informal Education
Peer reviewedYackel, Erna; Cobb, Paul – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1996
Presents a way of interpreting mathematics classrooms, by advancing the notion of sociomathematical norms, to account for how students develop mathematical beliefs and values and how they become intellectually autonomous in mathematics. Includes episodes from a second-grade classroom to clarify the processes by which sociomathematical norms are…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Classroom Environment, Cognitive Development, Elementary Education


