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Estes, Thomas H. | 1 |
Macnamara, John | 1 |
Wheeler, Valerie | 1 |
Wilson, Thomas Lightfoote | 1 |
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Duckworth, Eleanor – Harvard Educational Review, 1991
Focuses on the nature of understanding by detailing the process of clinical interviewing. Examples from experiential learning in curriculum and teacher development lead to discussion of curriculum activity that celebrates the complexity of subject matter and the value of engaging learners in pursuing their own learning. (SK)
Descriptors: Comprehension, Curriculum Development, Difficulty Level, Educational Research
Duckworth, Eleanor – 1979
This booklet contains a speech on the value of discovery learning in building a sound knowledge base. The author contends that systematic concepts (such as spatial relations) should be fully explored by experimentation and discussion in the classroom. The cognitive processes involved in solving problems are examined and examples are given of…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Creative Thinking

Wilson, Thomas Lightfoote – Childhood Education, 1980
Explores the nature and uses of human understanding by focusing on three points of emphasis: characterizing the meaning of human understanding as a function of being human, reviewing the consequences of inhumanity, and proposing a process for human understanding through multicultural consciousness. (CM)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Comprehension, Cultural Pluralism, Elementary Secondary Education

Macnamara, John – Journal of Child Language, 1979
Presents a rebuttal to Hidi and Hildyard's (1976) criticism of Macnamara et al.'s (1976) assertion regarding the ability of four-year-old children to grasp implicatives and presuppositions. (AM)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension
Wheeler, Valerie – 1979
Research evidence currently indicates that young children's communication skills for both the speaker and the listener roles are often ineffective. The accuracy of children's communication improves gradually over the elementary school years. Current thinking in the area of metacognition may be very useful in understanding the development of…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Communication Skills, Comprehension
Estes, Thomas H. – 1978
The central feature of language is symbolic meaning, and the act of reading is a part of the symbolic process that characterizes human life. Meaning occurs as a result of interpretation in a context, not as a result of response or reaction. Signs have a literal meaning in a specific context, while symbols have a figurative meaning in an implicit…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Comprehension, Intellectual Development, Language

Cook, V. J. – English Language Teaching Journal, 1979
The gap between the language that foreign language teachers present to their students in the classroom and the language of real-life situations is discussed. The use of dialogues in the classroom and oral comprehension as a learning activity are covered. (SW)
Descriptors: Communicative Competence (Languages), Comprehension, Dialogs (Language), Elementary Secondary Education

Eisner, Elliot W. – Educational Researcher, 1993
Explains how the author's ideas about the development of the mind and forms through which its contents are revealed developed. Also, explores uncertainties the author has felt about educational philosophy and practice, and discusses implications for future educational research that does justice to the development of human intellectual capacities.…
Descriptors: Art Teachers, Child Development, Children, Cognitive Processes