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McMahon, Walter W.; Oketch, Moses – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2013
This paper estimates the effects of human capital skills largely created through education on life's chances over the life cycle. Qualifications as a measure of these skills affect earnings, and schooling affects private and social non-market benefits beyond earnings. Private non-market benefits include better own-health, child health, spousal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Human Capital, Educational Attainment, Outcomes of Education
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Moulson, Margaret C.; Fox, Nathan A.; Zeanah, Charles H.; Nelson, Charles A. – Developmental Psychology, 2009
To examine the neurobiological consequences of early institutionalization, the authors recorded event-related potentials (ERPs) from 3 groups of Romanian children--currently institutionalized, previously institutionalized but randomly assigned to foster care, and family-reared children--in response to pictures of happy, angry, fearful, and sad…
Descriptors: Brain, Foster Care, Human Body, Nonverbal Communication
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Lenroot, Rhoshel K.; Giedd, Jay N. – Brain and Cognition, 2010
Adolescence is a time of increased divergence between males and females in physical characteristics, behavior, and risk for psychopathology. Here we will review data regarding sex differences in brain structure and function during this period of the lifespan. The most consistent sex difference in brain morphometry is the 9-12% larger brain size…
Descriptors: Physical Characteristics, Psychopathology, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Longitudinal Studies
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Bagot, Rosemary C.; Meaney, Michael J. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2010
Objective: Child and adolescent psychiatry is rife with examples of the sustained effects of early experience on brain function. The study of behavioral genetics provides evidence for a relation between genomic variation and personality and with the risk for psychopathology. A pressing challenge is that of "conceptually" integrating findings from…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Psychopathology, Personality, Genetics
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Marley, Scott C.; Levin, Joel R.; Glenberg, Arthur M. – Journal of Experimental Education, 2010
The authors conducted 2 experiments with children from a reservation community. In Experiment 1, 45 third-grade children were randomly assigned to the following reading strategies: (a) "reread," in which participants read each sentence of a story and then reread it; (b) "observe," in which participants read sentences and then observed an…
Descriptors: Sentences, American Indians, Imagery, Reading Strategies
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Homer, Bruce D.; Plass, Jan L. – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2010
The influence of prior knowledge and cognitive development on the effectiveness of iconic representations in science visualizations was examined. Middle and high school students (N = 186) were given narrated visualizations of two chemistry topics: Kinetic Molecular Theory (Day 1) and Ideal Gas Laws (Day 2). For half of the visualizations, iconic…
Descriptors: Age, Prior Learning, Mechanics (Physics), Cognitive Development
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Villatte, Matthieu; Monestes, Jean-Louis; McHugh, Louise; Freixa i Baque, Esteve; Loas, Gwenole – Psychological Record, 2010
The current study assessed deictic relational responding in people with schizophrenia. A perspective-taking task and a mental states attribution task were employed with a sample of 15 patients diagnosed with schizophrenia and 15 age-matched controls. Results revealed poorer performance of participants with schizophrenia in responding in accordance…
Descriptors: Schizophrenia, Perspective Taking, Patients, Cognitive Development
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Tzeng, Jeng-Yi – Journal of Research in Reading, 2010
From the perspective of the Fuzzy Trace Theory, this study investigated the impacts of concept maps with two strategic orientations (comprehensive and thematic representations) on readers' performance of cognitive operations (such as perception, verbatim memory, gist reasoning and syntheses) while the readers were reading two history articles that…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Reading Materials, Maps, Memory
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Montford, Emily I. Purvis; Readdick, Christine A. – Early Child Development and Care, 2008
The relationship between preschoolers' puzzlemaking strategies and part-whole perception was investigated in the present study. Forty-eight two year olds and 48 four year olds were randomly selected from eight licensed childcare centers. Puzzlemaking strategies (image, form, color, and trial and error) were measured by performance in the…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Geometric Concepts, Language Acquisition, Perception
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Montgomery, James W.; Magimairaj, Beula M.; O'Malley, Michelle H. – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2008
The influence of three mechanisms of working memory (phonological short-term memory (PSTM capacity), attentional resource control/allocation, and processing speed) on children's complex (and simple) sentence comprehension was investigated. Fifty two children (6-12 years) completed a nonword repetition task (indexing PSTM), concurrent verbal…
Descriptors: Sentences, Reaction Time, Short Term Memory, Indexing
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Yoshikawa, Hirokazu; Godfrey, Erin B.; Rivera, Ann C. – New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 2008
Few studies have examined how experiences associated with being an undocumented immigrant parent affects children's development. In this article, the authors apply social exclusion theory to examine how access to institutional resources that require identification may matter for parents and children in immigrant families. As hypothesized, groups…
Descriptors: Social Isolation, Identification (Psychology), Undocumented Immigrants, Cognitive Development
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Noddings, Nel – Educational Leadership, 2008
Critical thinking is the sort of mental activity that uses facts to plan, order, and work toward an end; seeks meaning or an explanation; is self-reflective; and uses reason to question claims and make judgments. Any subject--be it physics, algebra, or auto repair--can promote critical thinking as long as teachers teach the subject matter in…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Critical Thinking, Vocational Education, Education Work Relationship
Gurzick, David – ProQuest LLC, 2009
American adolescents have experienced growth in their use of online communities; yet, it was unknown whether the current understanding of online-community design applied to the design of communities specific to adolescents. This study bridged this gap, examining (a) How adolescents interact in an online community designed in accordance with…
Descriptors: Design Requirements, Adolescents, Interaction, Guidelines
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Stevens, Michael C. – Brain and Cognition, 2009
Developmental cognitive neuroscience is a rapidly growing field that examines the relationships between biological development and cognitive ability. In the past decade, there has been ongoing refinement of concepts and methodology related to the study of "functional connectivity" among distributed brain regions believed to underlie cognition and…
Descriptors: Brain, Language Acquisition, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Ability
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Mundy, Eleanor; Gilmore, Camilla K. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
When children learn to count and acquire a symbolic system for representing numbers, they map these symbols onto a preexisting system involving approximate nonsymbolic representations of quantity. Little is known about this mapping process, how it develops, and its role in the performance of formal mathematics. Using a novel task to assess…
Descriptors: Symbols (Mathematics), Young Children, Concept Mapping, Cognitive Development
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