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Allee-Herndon, Karyn A.; Roberts, Sherron Killingsworth; Hu, BiYing; Clark, M. H.; Stewart, Martha Lue – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2022
The research literature well establishes that adverse conditions, such as poverty, can affect children's cognitive development and academic achievement. Educators are challenged to translate these understandings into instructional practices grounded in research that best meet the needs of students, especially students living in poverty who are at…
Descriptors: Play, Kindergarten, Young Children, Emergent Literacy
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Geary, David C.; vanMarle, Kristy – Developmental Psychology, 2016
At the beginning of preschool (M = 46 months of age), 197 (94 boys) children were administered tasks that assessed a suite of nonsymbolic and symbolic quantitative competencies as well as their executive functions, verbal and nonverbal intelligence, preliteracy skills, and their parents' education level. The children's mathematics achievement was…
Descriptors: Young Children, Mathematics, Mathematics Achievement, Mathematics Education
Ross-Sheriff, Fariyal; And Others – 1977
This study of cognitive and perceptual development compared low SES minority urban children participating in special programs with middle SES minority urban children and with the national norms on cognitive and perceptual measures. Subjects were 169 4- and 5-year-old minority urban children attending preschools in a large city. Eighteen middle…
Descriptors: Black Youth, Cognitive Development, Disadvantaged Youth, Low Income
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Austin, Gilbert R.; And Others – Review of Educational Research, 1972
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Educational Research
Meyer, John K. – 1978
Basic features of a method of connection-making training, developed by Gordon and Poze, can provide a compact method of connection-making in varying mental age levels. Based on the premise that simple connection-making is innate and available to stimulation in children of the primary and kindergarten grade ages, this method was used on a target…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Concept Formation, Educationally Disadvantaged
Brown, Edward K. – 1975
Previous studies have reported that disadvantaged children tend to loose the skills and abilities they had acquired in special and/or intervention programs when they are placed in education settings which do not support their needs. Since the 1970 census data tended to indicate that the pupil composition of the schools had changed, it became…
Descriptors: Achievement Gains, Basic Skills, Census Figures, Cognitive Development
Stanford Research Inst., Menlo Park, CA. Educational Policy Research Center. – 1977
This volume is one of a series of NIE sponsored studies, intended to inform the forthcoming congressional debate over the renewal of ESEA Title I. This study reassesses current compensatory education policies as well as alternative Federal strategies. The body of the report has three sections. The first describes the need for and the limits of…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Basic Skills, Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education
New York State Education Dept., Albany. Bureau of Mathematics Education. – 1968
This volume contains the major presentations of two conferences on the theme: "Low Achievers in Mathematics and Title 1, ESEA" attended by mathematics educators in New York State. Melvin Mendelsohn summarizes "Activities of the Bureau of Mathematics Education Related to Title I, ESEA". "Cognition and Learning Style of the…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Cognitive Development, Educational Technology, Educationally Disadvantaged
Schweitzer, Paul; And Others – 1971
At the beginning of the 1970-71 school year, eight ESEA Title I programs were implemented in Community District 23. The eight projects that were basic to the Title I program in District 23 included a Pre-Kindergarten Program, the basic aims of which were the development of language, perceptual, and cognitive skills in young children. A second…
Descriptors: Bilingual Education, Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Early Childhood Education
Robinson, Barbara – 1971
The Pre-Kindergarten Component, part of the Language Development Component funded under Title I of the Elementary Secondary Education Act of 1965, served 677 four-year-olds in 21 Title I schools. The design of the component was based on the assumption that many pre-school disadvantaged pupils have underdeveloped potential in many areas necessary…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Community Involvement, Compensatory Education, Language Acquisition
Prusso, Kenneth W.; And Others – 1973
In this volume, ESEA Title I projects related to instructional practices and student cognitive performance, carried out in Philadelphia during 1971-1972, are evaluated. The six projects in this cluster are: Class for Mentally Retarded/Emotionally Distrubed Children; English as a Second Language; Improvement of Reading Skills (Reading Skills…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Elementary Education, English (Second Language)
Robinson, Barbara
The Pre-Kindergarten Program was established as a part of the Language Development Program (funded under Title I of the 1965 Elementary Secondary Education Act) which is intended to increase the language facility of low income Columbus children. The pre-kindergarten child should leave the program feeling important and unique and should have gained…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Compensatory Education, Inner City, Language Acquisition
Nieman, Ronald H.; Gastright, Joseph F. – 1981
This eight-year follow-up study, examining the educational impact of a compensatory early childhood program upon disadvantaged students, compares mean scores of the treatment group of 410 former preschool and all day kindergarten students with those of a comparison group of 141 traditional half day kindergarten students. Empirical evidence shows…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Disadvantaged Youth
Teaching and Learning Research Corp., New York, NY. – 1973
The objectives of this program, funded under Title I of the 1965 ESEA, were as follows: (1) to raise the achievement levels in reading for children in the special schools who were retarded in reading two or more years. Each of the 28 special schools selected a target group of children for whom intensive remediation was provided; (2) to develop…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Dropout Programs, Educational Diagnosis, Emotional Disturbances
Saginaw Public Schools, MI. – 1974
This report presents an evaluation of a Title I preschool program which served 403 children during the 1973-74 school year, and was designed to prepare disadvantaged 4-year-olds for entry into kindergarten. In terms of instructional approach, the program closely followed Piagetian theory and included preservice and inservice teacher training. The…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Basic Skills, Cognitive Development, Disadvantaged Youth
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