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Peer reviewedGlynn, Shawn M.; Takahashi, Tomone – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1998
Examines the role that elaborate analogy can play when middle school students learn a major concept from a science text. Discusses implications for meaningful science learning. Contains 59 references. (DDR)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Middle Schools, Science Education, Textbook Content
Peer reviewedBritton, Bruce K.; Sorrells, Robert C. – Discourse Processes, 1998
Tests and confirms two hypotheses about the representation of knowledge in memory: that a person's mental representation of a newly learned body of knowledge has two parts (the information presented, and a product of the person's thinking about it); and that a body of knowledge learned from experience is organized into distinct…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Language Research, Memory
Peer reviewedOverton, Willis F.; Muller, Ulrich – Human Development, 1998
Replies to commentaries by Mandler (1988) and Rochat and Striano (1988), focusing on Mandler's comments. Maintains that their disagreements are the result of deep meta-theoretical differences regarding a representational theory of mind rather than misrepresentations of fact. Discusses how their meta-theoretical differences result in several basic…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedMacLaury, Robert E. – Language Sciences, 2002
Introduces this special issue of the journal, which focuses on vantage theory. Articles in this issue demonstrate applications of vantage theory across diverse realms of cognition. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, Color, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedTariq, Vicki N. – Journal of Biological Education, 2002
Provides evidence of a decline in basic numeracy skills among first-year bioscience undergraduate students. Tests conceptualized numeracy skills which form a component of an introductory microbiology module. (Contains 23 references.) (Author/YDS)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Higher Education, Microbiology, Numeracy
Maclellan, Effie – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2005
The common sense notion of learning as the all-pervasive acquisition of new behaviour and knowledge, made vivid by experience, is an incomplete characterisation, because it assumes that the learning of behaviour and the learning of knowledge are indistinguishable, and that acquisition constitutes learning without reference to transfer. A…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Concept Formation, Psychology, Transfer of Training
Quinn, Paul C. – Child Development, 2004
Visual preference procedures were used to investigate development of perceptually based subordinate-level categorization in 3- to 7-month-old infants. Experiments 1 and 2 demonstrated that 3- to 4-month-olds did not form category representations for photographic exemplars of subordinate-level classes of cats and dogs (i.e., Siamese vs. Tabby,…
Descriptors: Infants, Classification, Age Differences, Concept Formation
Brady, Marion – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
The current fervor for highly specified standards for each academic discipline requires students to view reality as composed of fragmented and unrelated bits of information. In this article, the author argues that what students really need is a system for organizing and integrating what they know so that they can understand the "big picture."…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Academic Standards, Knowledge Level, Concept Formation
Sullivan, Sherry E.; Arthur, Michael B. – Journal of Vocational Behavior, 2006
Although there has been increased interest in the boundaryless career since the publication of Arthur and Rousseau's book (1996), there is still some misunderstanding about what the concept means. This article examines the boundaryless career and presents a model that attempts to visually capture Arthur and Rousseau's suggestion that the concept…
Descriptors: Careers, Evolution, Physical Mobility, Publications
Matlock, Teenie; Ramscar, Michael; Boroditsky, Lera – Cognitive Science, 2005
How do we understand time and other entities we can neither touch nor see? One possibility is that we tap into our concrete, experiential knowledge, including our understanding of physical space and motion, to make sense of abstract domains such as time. To examine how pervasive an aspect of cognition this is, we investigated whether thought about…
Descriptors: Time, Motion, Schemata (Cognition), Concept Formation
Osterlind, Karolina – International Journal of Science Education, 2005
A case study is presented describing the work of three pupils in the upper level of compulsory school. The pupils were learning about the intensified greenhouse effect and the depletion of the ozone layer. In their work, the need for certain domain-specific knowledge becomes apparent; for example, understanding such concepts as photosynthesis,…
Descriptors: Students, Concept Formation, Horticulture, Climate
Sipe, Lawrence R.; Ghiso, Maria Paula – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2004
This article reflects on a classroom study of children's literary responses to unpack the process of building conceptual categories in ethnographic research, thus challenging accounts that obscure the role of the researcher and present findings as fixed and infallible.
Descriptors: Ethnography, Reader Response, Classroom Research, Concept Formation
Kalish, Michael L.; Lewandowsky, Stephan; Krushke, John K. – Psychological Review, 2004
Knowledge partitioning is a theoretical construct holding that knowledge is not always integrated and homogeneous but may be separated into independent parcels containing mutually contradictory information. Knowledge partitioning has been observed in research on expertise, categorization, and function learning. This article presents a theory of…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Knowledge Representation, Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation
Middleton, Erica L.; Wisniewski, Edward J.; Trindel, Kelly A.; Imai, Mutsumi – Journal of Memory and Language, 2004
The English language makes a grammatical distinction between count nouns and mass nouns. For example, count nouns but not mass nouns can be pluralized and can appear with the indefinite article. Some scholars dismiss the distinction as an arbitrary convention of language whereas others suggest that it is conceptually based. The present studies…
Descriptors: Individual Characteristics, Concept Formation, English, Nouns
Ouvrier-Buffet, Cecile – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2006
The definition of "definition" cannot be taken for granted. The problem has been treated from various angles in different journals. Among other questions raised on the subject we find: the notions of "concept definition" and "concept image", conceptions of mathematical definitions, redefinitions, and from a more axiomatic point of view, how to…
Descriptors: Definitions, Concept Formation, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics

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