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Showing 1 to 15 of 49 results Save | Export
Wessling, Suki – Understanding Our Gifted, 2012
When the author started homeschooling, she would listen jealously as other parents discussed curriculum for reading and math, two subjects that her daughter never needed any instruction in as a young child. She was eager to try out curriculum, but her visual spatial daughter was not quite ready for learning on paper. She found out that searching…
Descriptors: Home Schooling, Curriculum Development, Adjustment (to Environment), Pacing
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Herrmann, Ned – NASSP Bulletin, 1982
Outlines the differences between left-brain and right-brain functioning and between left-brain and right-brain dominant individuals, and concludes that creativity uses both halves of the brain. Discusses how both students and curriculum can become more "whole-brained." (Author/JM)
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Style, Creativity, Curriculum Development
Alvino, James – Principal, 1981
Programs for the gifted typically offer an increased workload or linear acceleration of subject matter. Gifted children really need a qualitatively different curriculum that considers their preferred learning styles. This article discusses relevant research findings and suggests ways of incorporating them into a gifted program. (WD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Differences, Elementary Secondary Education
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Ross, Charles – Journal of Epsilon Pi Tau, 1988
Discusses haptic learning, problems related to teaching students with that learning style, and methods that have been used to mediate these problems. (JOW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Industrial Arts
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Telzrow, Cathy Fultz – Educational Forum, 1981
Research evidence suggests that there are natural variations in children's learning, many of which can be categorized by age and sex. Educators must become knowledgeable about brain growth and its curricular implications. (SK)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development
Conner, James E. – For Adults Only, 1982
Teachers cannot afford to ignore the research findings on right and left brain functions. Basically, three things have been discovered: (1) each hemisphere of the brain processes information differently; (2) in some people, the hemispheres work well together, in others they are in a constant state of disagreement; and (3) each hemisphere is…
Descriptors: Brain, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hollins, Etta Ruth – Negro Educational Review, 1982
Although theorists have recognized the significance of culture in learning, there is a need to develop learning theory that is pluralistic, applicable in a multicultural setting, does not conflict with the established learning patterns of children from different backgrounds, and incorporates research that explains cultural biases. (Author/MJL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Influences, Curriculum Development
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Guardo, Carol J. – Liberal Education, 1986
To achieve the kind of reform advocated in recent reports on higher education, faculty designing new curricula will have to overcome their existing perceptions of the incoming student and inform themselves about real students' characteristics, skills, and cognitive styles. (MSE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Educational Improvement, Higher Education
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Williams, Christine C. – Community Services Catalyst, 1984
Reviews David Kolb's Experiential Learning Model, stressing its potential for developing or redesigning curricula for adult learners to include learning modes focusing on concrete experience, active experimentation, reflective observation, and abstract conceptualization. Offers a checklist for assessing which modes are accommodated by an…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Learning, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development
Kelly, Peter – Paul Chapman Publishing, 2005
This book begins with the introductory chapter, "Don't Think; Just Get on with Your Work," in which the author argues that children are thinkers, but that there are schooling barriers to engaging this thinking. Chapter 1, A Place to Think, considers these barriers in more detail and provides some ideas about how children learn in schools and what…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Creativity, Curriculum Development, Primary Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Smith, Frank – Language Arts, 1981
Examines the shortcomings of prepackaged teaching programs for reading and writing instruction that are designed by those removed from the learning environment. (HTH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education, Instructional Materials
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Renzulli, Joseph S.; And Others – Elementary School Journal, 1982
Presents a plan for compacting and streamlining the regular curriculum in order to relieve gifted students of the boredom that often results from unchallenging work and to provide the time gifted students need to pursue acceleration and enrichment activities after prerequisite competencies have been mastered. (Author/RH)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Acceleration, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Design
Epstein, Herman T. – Principal, 1981
Addresses the difficulties in assessing the receptive capacity and learning style of a child and matching it to the instructional aspects of schooling. Describes a teacher sensitization course that has been developed to make such matching possible. (WD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education
Applebee, Arthur N. – 1993
The awakening of public interest in curriculum has come at a time when, within the education profession, the conventional wisdom about teaching and learning has itself undergone a major transformation. New Constructivist theories of knowing have emphasized the social nature of the construction of knowledge: students learn by "putting it into…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Constructivism (Learning), Curriculum Development, Discourse Communities
Daneshvar, K.; Tranjan, F. M. – 1998
Although in the liberal arts the main concern is comprehensive education, it is generally accepted that an engineering curriculum, while providing the fundamentals, can change continuously to accommodate technological, industrial, and economical interests. Meanwhile, in recent years many new forms of learning have been proposed that are quite…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Core Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Engineering Education
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