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Lerner, Richard M. – Human Development, 1995
Explains the place of learning in human development from the perspective developmental contextualism, where development involves changing relations between the developing person and his or her changing context. Demonstrates that learning is no more nor less important than other focal functions at a given level; any impact is through being part of…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Psychology, Individual Development
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Zimmerman, Barry J. – Human Development, 1995
Notes contemporary models of human development have expanded to address a wider set of issues underlying personal change. Discusses the social cognitive model of self-regulatory development. Emphasizes the crucial development of self-regulatory competence: the point at which the processes of development become fully and reciprocally interactive…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Psychology, Epistemology
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Lindenberger, Ulman; Bates, Paul B. – Human Development, 1995
Calls for a coalition of different research methods and strategies to better understand learning and development. Describes two such strategies: (1) testing-the-limits decomposing age-graded differences in upper limits of plasticity; and (2) experimental simulation of development, a coordinated sequence of theory-guided research steps. Both…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Psychology, Individual Development
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Hoyer, W. J. – Human Development, 1980
Several different conceptions of the relationship between learning and development are considered in this article. It is argued that dialectical and ecological developmental orientations might provide a useful basis for synthesizing the contrasting frameworks of the operant, information processing, learning theory, and knowledge acquisition…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Individual Development, Information Processing, Learning
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Pascual-Leone, Juan – Human Development, 1994
Notes that Halford's book does not really address children's own understanding but rather the psychologist's attempt to understand children from the outside. Discusses the five major sets of ideas at the core of Halford's explanations of capacity, complexity/dimensionality, development, and learning. Examines two arguments against Halford's…
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Children, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
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Barron, Brigid – Human Development, 2006
Adolescents often pursue learning opportunities both in and outside school once they become interested in a topic. In this paper, a learning ecology framework and an associated empirical research agenda are described. This framework highlights the need to better understand how learning outside school relates to learning within schools or other…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Ecology, Lifelong Learning, Educational Environment
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Fischer, Kurt W.; Granott, Nira – Human Development, 1995
Suggests that the study of microdevelopment offers a potentially powerful way to relate learning and development where similar changes occur but in differing time frames. Microdevelopment analyzes short-term changes as developmental functions. Individuals and groups function at widely different developmental levels and grow in diverse nonlinear…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Psychology
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Feldman, David Henry – Human Development, 1995
Nonuniversal theory can be used to reframe the learning-development dichotomy into a spectrum of important changes, ranging from small-scale learning events to large-scale developmental shifts. Using the universal-to-unique continuum as an organizing framework, several change mechanisms can be identified as necessary for movement through…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Psychology
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Pascual-Leone, Juan – Human Development, 1995
Sees learning as a component of development. Explains how cognitive growth can result from dialectical interactions among modes of learning and attentional mental capacity, and that these modes and components of attention relate to contextual function areas which, being neuropsychological units, can be clarified as to function by connectionist…
Descriptors: Attention Span, Change Agents, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Continuity
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van Geert, Paul – Human Development, 1995
Argues that what matters is not the difference between learning and development, but the dynamic relationships that form the key to understanding. Examined two models of these relationships: (1) a semantic approach, distinguishing five dimensions along which learning and development can be compared; and (2) a mathematical nonlinear growth model…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Developmental Continuity
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Labouvie-Vief, G.; And Others – Human Development, 1995
Examines the representations of mental functioning in terms of images and stories of gender relations. Suggests that the rational pole of the mind is often stereotyped as "hard" and "masculine," while the nonrational pole is considered "soft" and "feminine." Reviews evidence suggesting that these dynamics…
Descriptors: Adults, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences, Cultural Images
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McVicker, Clinchy B. – Human Development, 1995
Underlines the importance of investigating development within concrete thinking. Points out the importance of taking seriously the need for epistemological pluralism respecting and rewarding the labor-intensive methods of inquiry that embody the kind of concrete, contextual thinking researchers try to understand. (AA)
Descriptors: Adults, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences, Cultural Images