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MIEL, ALICE
SEQUENCE IN LEARNING IS USEFUL ONLY AS IT CONTRIBUTES TO THE CONTINUITY OF A CHILD'S OVERALL DEVELOPMENT. CHILDREN MAY NOT GO THROUGH THE SAME SEQUENCE TO ARRIVE AT A SIMILAR POINT OF UNDERSTANDING. EDUCATIONAL PROGRESS IS INDICATED BY A CHILD'S GROWTH IN THE DEVELOPMENT OF STRATEGIC CONCEPTS, IN WAYS OF PROCESSING INFORMATION, AND IN WAYS OF…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Curriculum Design
Van De Riet, Vernon; Resnick, Michael B. – 1972
The effects of two or three years of a sequential educational intervention program on culturally deprived children were studied with two groups of four-year-olds and two groups of five-year-olds. They were matched on several developmental variables, with one group at each age level entering the experimental Learning to Learn Program. The other…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Curriculum Development, Demonstration Programs
Education Service Center Region 10, Dallas, TX. – 1976
The design of the Phasing in Career Education Systematically (PICES) project was based on two data centered systems, sequencing and needs assessment. Four Texas independent school districts participated in the project which directly involved 986 students, 69 teachers, and 27 administrators. Some of the major activities conducted in each district…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Career Education, Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development
Tronick, Edward; Greenfield, Patricia Marks – 1973
This curriculum was designed as a learning sequence for the adults in charge of a group care center for infants. For example, the sequence of the steps in the child's motor development (e.g., reaching) are described, and some activities and materials appropriate to each step are suggested. Other areas for developmental sequences and activities…
Descriptors: Child Psychology, Cognitive Development, Curriculum Development, Decision Making
Arizona State Dept. of Education, Phoenix. – 1976
This curriculum guide for grades K-12 is designed to help art teachers, classroom teachers, art consultants, and administrators develop and maintain art programs. The guide has four main parts, the first part containing an introduction and forward. Part two includes the rationale, the focus, and the components of an art education curriculum. Also…
Descriptors: Accountability, Aesthetic Education, Art Appreciation, Art Education