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Moberg, Eric – Online Submission, 2006
Malcolm Knowles laments the paucity of "thinking, investigating, and writing about adult learning" in the opening sentence of his theoretical framework of "Andragogy" (1998, p. 35). Knowles' central argument is that we learn differently as adults from how we learn as children, so we should tailor adult education accordingly. Knowles highlighted…
Descriptors: Andragogy, Adult Learning, Differences, Instruction

Case, Robbie – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1974
Pascual-Leone's neo-Piagetian theory of development is used to predict the pre- and postinstruction distributions of scores on a subject-controlled digit placement task as a function of three parameters dealing with mental strategy and capacity. (Author/ED)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Conceptual Schemes
Artwohl, Susan L. – 1980
Studies using human figure drawing as a measurement technique are reviewed as part of an inquiry concerning the effectiveness of instruction to improve children's body image. It is concluded that the findings reviewed are inconclusive as to whether instruction can improve children's perceptions and knowledge of body image, and that further…
Descriptors: Body Image, Children, Cognitive Development, Freehand Drawing

Lepper, Mark R.; Gurtner, Jean-Luc – American Psychologist, 1989
Reviews the controversy over the effects that various forms of computer use are likely to have on different children's learning, motivation, and social behavior. Considers difficulties in the current state of empirical research in this area, and offers recommendations for future research. (Author/BJV)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Psychology, Children, Classroom Environment