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Buckley, Joanne – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1994
Maintains that Canadian scholar, Kieran Egan, developed a schema of childhood development that presents a bold, new approach to the stages of growth, both affectively and cognitively. Describes Egan's views and how the school curriculum must be adapted to correspond more closely to these views. (CFR)
Descriptors: Child Development, Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
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Levstik, Linda S.; Barton, Keith C. – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1996
Reports on the results of an experiment testing 58 elementary school students tasked with chronologically ordering a set of nine historical pictures and thinking aloud about their efforts. Provides increased evidence regarding the kind and sources of children's historical knowledge and how they deploy that knowledge. (MJP)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Elementary Education, Fundamental Concepts
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Diamond, C. T. Patrick – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1988
The author outlines a five-stage conceptualization of the differences in the construction, content, and mode of teaching and learning at various points in his own professional development. Each stage represents a different "focal length" or movement from tight and unvarying agendas to more elastic and accommodating imaginings. (GEA)
Descriptors: Career Development, Developmental Stages, Educational Research, Teacher Education
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Egan, Kieran – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 1983
Education, as a rational business, has largely ignored children's fantasies. Rather than dismissing fantasy, as both traditional and progressive educators have, the educational task is to begin the process of linking to the real world those basic concepts which make fantasy so engaging and meaningful to children. (IS)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Style, Developmental Stages, Educational History