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Cognitive Development | 4 |
Preschool Children | 4 |
Sequential Learning | 4 |
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Child Development | 1 |
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Israel, Allen C. | 1 |
Masangkay, Zenaida S. | 1 |
O'Leary, Daniel | 1 |
Paris, Scott G. | 1 |
SPRIGLE, HERBERT | 1 |
Schmidt, Constance R. | 1 |
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Israel, Allen C.; O'Leary, Daniel – Child Development, 1973
Preschool children in a free-play situation experienced one of two training sequences: saying then doing, or doing then saying. The effect of training on the development of a correspondence between children's verbal and nonverbal behaviors was examined. The say-do sequence produced higher levels of correspondence. (ST)
Descriptors: Behavior, Cognitive Development, Intervention, Nonverbal Communication

Schmidt, Constance R.; Paris, Scott G. – 1977
This series of four experiments on children's causal sequences was directed at: (1) extending Brown's research on temporal ordering to causal relationships portrayed in picture sequences; (2) investigating the developmental progression of skills involved in understanding and remembering sequences; and (3) examining the development of reversible…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Elementary School Students
Masangkay, Zenaida S.; And Others – 1973
Three experiments assessed the ability of children 2 to 5 years of age to infer, under very simple task conditions, what another person sees when viewing something from a position other than the children's own. Data indicates that some ability of this genre appears to exist by age 2. The data also suggests a distinction between an earlier and a…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cross Sectional Studies
SPRIGLE, HERBERT; AND OTHERS
AN EXPERIMENTAL PRESCHOOL PROGRAM HAS BEEN DEVELOPED, THE PRIMARY OBJECTIVE OF WHICH IS TO HELP THE CHILD TO LEARN THE PROCESS OF LEARNING. ORGANIZED ON THE ASSUMPTION THAT COGNITIVE GROWTH PROCEEDS FROM MOTOR TO PERCEPTUAL TO SYMBOLIC FUNCTIONING, THE PROGRAM EMPHASIZES THE IMPORTANCE OF LANGUAGE AS A TOOL FOR THINKING AND REASONING. AN…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Curriculum Research, Disadvantaged