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Richard Velasco; Dae S. Hong – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2023
In this study, we examined one experienced mathematician's class practices, with particular attention to cognitive model described in genetic decomposition. Our findings indicate that students only had limited opportunities to be familiar with the first three steps in genetic decomposition, which may potentially lead students to answer limit tasks…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Skills, Mathematics Instruction
Wiley, Keadija C. – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Children in the United States live in a highly racialized society and, as a result, acquire an awareness of race at an early age, eventually developing an understanding of racism (Quintana, 2008). Understanding race and racism is especially relevant for Black children, given their marginalized status in the U.S. and the likelihood that they will…
Descriptors: Children, Parents, Blacks, African Americans
Williams, Daniel S. – ProQuest LLC, 2023
The concentration in K-12 education on higher-order thinking has diminished the importance of math fact automaticity, which is the ability to deliver a correct answer immediately from long-term memory without impeding the working memory. This quantitative study investigated the influence of automaticity of high school students on their Missouri…
Descriptors: High School Students, Mathematics Education, Mathematics Tests, Standardized Tests
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Andreas Haraldsrud; Tor Ole B. Odden – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
When learning chemistry, students must learn to extract chemical information from mathematical expressions. However, chemistry students' exposure to mathematics often comes primarily from pure mathematics courses, which can lead to knowledge fragmentation and potentially hinder their ability to use mathematics in chemistry. This study examines how…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Mathematics, Computation, Cognitive Processes
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Seyedehkhadijeh Azimi Asmaroud – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2023
Textbooks play an important role in teachers' instructional decisions (Jones & Tarr, 2007), which consequently affects students' learning. This paper reports on a comparison of the elementary mathematics textbooks used in Iran and the United States, the Go-Math textbook. I analyzed topic sequences, frequency of the tasks, and cognitive demands…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Mathematics Instruction, Fractions, Textbooks
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Joseph Zajda – Globalisation, Comparative Education and Policy Research, 2023
This book analyses discourses of the use of motivation theories in schools globally. It focuses on the overall impact of motivation theories on teachers, students' engagement, well-being, academic excellence, standards, equity and global competitiveness. It examines the role of motivation theories impacting on teachers and students in the…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Models, Educational Theories, Motivation
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Beknazarova, Ulzhan U.; Almautova, Assiya B.; Yelemessova, Shynar M.; Abadildayeva, Shyrynkul K. – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2021
The theory of metaphor has gone through its development, starting with the works of Aristotle, in which it was begun, to the present state, when the linguistic paradigm became anthropocentric, and all linguistic phenomena are considered in direct connection with a person, his thinking, with society. The metaphor, which manifests the principle of…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Educational Philosophy, Cognitive Processes, Semantics
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Horn, Sebastian S.; Bayen, Ute J.; Michalkiewicz, Martha – Child Development, 2021
Younger children's free recall from episodic memory is typically less organized than recall by older children. To investigate if and how repeated learning opportunities help children use organizational strategies that improve recall, the authors analyzed category clustering across four study-test cycles. Seven-year-olds, 10-year-olds, and young…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Cognitive Processes, Young Children, Young Adults
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Kominsky, Jonathan F.; Gerstenberg, Tobias; Pelz, Madeline; Sheskin, Mark; Singmann, Henrik; Schulz, Laura; Keil, Frank C. – Developmental Psychology, 2021
Young children often struggle to answer the question "what would have happened?" particularly in cases where the adult-like "correct" answer has the same outcome as the event that actually occurred. Previous work has assumed that children fail because they cannot engage in accurate counterfactual simulations. Children have…
Descriptors: Simulation, Children, Age Differences, Child Development
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Bostic, Jonathan David – Applied Measurement in Education, 2021
Think alouds are valuable tools for academicians, test developers, and practitioners as they provide a unique window into a respondent's thinking during an assessment. The purpose of this special issue is to highlight novel ways to use think alouds as a means to gather evidence about respondents' thinking. An intended outcome from this special…
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Cognitive Processes, Data Collection, STEM Education
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Stepan, Michelle E.; Altmann, Erik M.; Fenn, Kimberly M. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Sleep deprivation impairs a wide range of cognitive processes, but the precise mechanism underlying these deficits is unclear. One prominent proposal is that sleep deprivation impairs vigilant attention, and that impairments in vigilant attention cause impairments in cognitive tasks that require attention. Here, we test this theory by studying the…
Descriptors: Sleep, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Attention
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Prezioso, M. G. – Children's Literature in Education, 2021
This article explores the relationship between enchantment and understanding in children's literature, where literary enchantment is not only an experience in which words entrance and mesmerize, eradicating the boundaries of ordinary perception, but also one that advances the reader's cognition. Focusing on Philip Pullman's "His Dark…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Cognitive Processes, Recreational Reading, Reading Comprehension
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Snoddy, Sean; Kurtz, Kenneth J. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Analogical comparison of 2 provided cases promotes spontaneous analogical transfer by encouraging a more abstract representation of a target principle. This is widely understood as a process of schema abstraction that aids retrieval from memory in the absence of superficial similarity. The category status hypothesis states that if knowledge about…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Classification, Logical Thinking, Cognitive Processes
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Hendrickson, Kristi; Oleson, Jacob; Walker, Elizabeth – Child Development, 2021
Although the ability to understand speech in adverse listening conditions is paramount for effective communication across the life span, little is understood about how this critical processing skill develops. This study asks how the dynamics of spoken word recognition (i.e., lexical access and competition) change during soft speech in 8- to…
Descriptors: Children, Word Recognition, Listening, Speech
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Ball, B. Hunter; Vogel, Anne; Ellis, Derek M.; Brewer, Gene A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Research suggests that forcing participants to withhold responding for as brief as 600 ms eliminates one of the most reliable findings in prospective memory (PM): the cue focality effect. This result undermines the conventional view that controlled attentional monitoring processes support PM, and instead suggests that cue detection results from…
Descriptors: Memory, Attention Control, Cues, Individual Differences
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