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Norris, Carole J. – 1976
The theories and practices of Jean Piaget and Maria Montessori are outlined in relation to the teaching of beginning reading. Parallels are drawn between the two authors' views of the nature of intelligence and of motivation, leading to the conclusion that there may be danger of overemphasizing reading at the expense of other areas of the…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Educational Theories, Elementary Education, Intellectual Development
Campbell, Richard L.; Martinez-Perez, Luis A. – 1979
This report presents the results of a study of the relationship between self concept and academic achievement and between self concept and intellectual development in minority group school children. The subjects were second grade black and Hispanic children in an urban school. The Stanford Achievement Test was used to measure academic achievement…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Blacks, Elementary Education, Grade 2
Kalyan-Masih, Violet – 1979
Children's drawings of "a house with a tree behind it" were analyzed for (1) developmental changes in graphic representation over a 3-year period; (2) relationship with Piagetian tasks (the Nebraska Wisconsin Cognitive Assessment Battery of the NC-124), Peabody IQ, and WISC-R; and (3) correspondence with the Luquet-Piaget sequence of…
Descriptors: Childrens Art, Developmental Stages, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Omanson, Richard C., And Others – 1978
The relationship between retention of story propositions and inferences was studied in two experiments on groups of children who averaged five and eight years in age. In the first experiment, the motives and theme of protagonists were varied and found to affect the number and kind of inferences made by eight-year-olds. The increase in the number…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Educational Research
Poresky, Robert H. – 1984
A geographically-based, random sample of 62 children, balanced for child gender, and their mothers who met selection criteria were observed and interviewed to determine the correlates of rural children's mental development. It was hypothesized that rural children's intellectual development would be positively correlated with a number of ecological…
Descriptors: Alienation, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Correlation
Pace, Ann Jaffe – 1978
The relationship between children's knowledge of particular situations and their comprehension of stories about them was investigated. Children in kindergarten and grades two, four, and six heard stories about differentially familiar situations and then answered questions. "Scripts," characterizing knowledge about stereotypical events, were…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Context Clues
Hausfather, Sam – 1996
Current reform efforts in education emphasize role changes for students and teachers within classrooms and schools. A phenomenological study examined one teacher's internal conflict while negotiating the shifting boundaries of power relations between teacher and students. The goal of this study was to explore the processes and constraints involved…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Elementary Education, Intellectual Development, Learning Experience
Hopper, Robert; Tilghman, Peter P. – 1979
Three studies tested the ability of children of different ages to comprehend spoken sentences while viewing pictures that differed from the sentences according to some plausible combinations of actor, action, and beneficiary. In the first two studies, involving a total of 140 subjects, nine contextual conditions were used, including sentence only,…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Comprehension, Cues, Early Childhood Education
Sedlak, Andrea J. – 1977
This paper presents a study of age differences in children's plan interpretations, interpretations of the interrelationship between actions, goals and outcomes. It is suggested that developmental differences exist which affect children's ability to recognize the necessity for internal and external consistency before labeling behaviors as…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Componential Analysis
Ginsberg, Erika Hoff; Abrahamson, Adele A. – 1976
In this study comprehension of sentences describing two events occurring simultaneously or in sequence was assessed in 5-, 7- and 9-year-old children. The sentences were at three different levels of linguistic complexity, differing only in whether simultaneity or sequentiality was described. Subjects were kindergarten, second, and fourth grade…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Developmental Stages
Cauley, Kathleen M. – 1986
This paper takes the position that logical knowledge is distinct from conceptual and procedural knowledge and can make a unique contribution to the understanding of knowledge acquisition. This view of logical knowledge departs from the traditional Piagetian view of stages and the overriding view of logic as the sole means of constructing new…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Children, Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation
Reed, Ronald F. – 1981
A year-long seminar for elementary teachers in analytic thinking for children (ATC) is offered at the School of Education at Texas Wesleyan College. ATC uses philosophy and logic to help children understand how they think and to improve their reasoning. Four guidelines are given: (1) Discuss the nature and function of authorities and arguments…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers, Inservice Teacher Education
Salesi, Rosemary A. – 1978
Some children lack the framework of prior experience necessary for the comprehension and enjoyment of fanciful literature. Fanciful literature, though grounded in reality, deals not only with what is, but also with what could be or might have been. Since readers actively construct meaning by relating what they read to their conceptual systems,…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Citations (References), Class Activities, 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
Robertson, Thomas S.; Rossiter, John R. – 1975
The findings of this study indicated that children's capacity to comprehend television advertising is primarily a developmental phenomenon, although social and experiential factors may have a moderate positive and a minor negative influence, respectively. Research subjects were 289 elementary school boys of first, third, and fifth grade levels,…
Descriptors: Advertising, Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Commercial Television
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