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Archibald, Georgia – Teacher Education Quarterly, 1985
Young students can use everyday experiences to give shape and meaning to the isolated pieces of information learned in the classroom. Unless past knowledge and experience is connected to new knowledge, the new learning is likely to be forgotten. Techniques are discussed and approaches for teacher education are suggested. (MT)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Experiential Learning, Prior Learning, Teaching Methods
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Woods, Robin K. – Educational Leadership, 1994
Students use their preschool experiences to form personal theories about the world and rarely correct misconceptions even when new information is presented. This article describes an elementary science teacher's efforts to help fifth and sixth graders revise personal electricity theories, based on experimentation. There is no simple way to…
Descriptors: Electricity, Elementary Education, Experiential Learning, Learning Processes
Watson, Jerry J. – 1985
Literary gaps were identified by Wolfgang Iser in 1974 as "vacant pages" that invite the reader to reflect and enter into the text thereby motivating students to experience the text as reality. Arthur Applebee, in 1979, identified three categories to distinguish children's types of interaction with stories: (1) the complexity of literary…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Creative Development, Creative Expression, Elementary Education
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Hayes, Brett K.; Taplin, John E. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1992
For both 6 and 11 year olds, social knowledge had a significant influence on test phase responses. It is maintained that the study clarifies the relationship between the use of knowledge-based and similarity-based information in children's acquisition of concepts. (BG)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Classification, Concept Formation
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Barbour, Chandler – Childhood Education, 1992
Maintains that preservice education courses (or "methods" courses) need to provide teacher candidates with opportunities to use their own stories and experiences in a naturalistic or "researching" approach to teaching young children. This approach will help preservice teachers learn how children use their past experiences…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Curriculum, Elementary School Students, Experiential Learning
Sesow, Bill – 1989
If students are able to relate what they learn in school to experiences they have outside the classroom, they will become better critical thinkers. This paper suggests a model for teachers to use in aiding such "transfer" of knowledge from the classroom to the student's past or future experiences. By maintaining a profile of the student's…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Elementary Education
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Tretter, Thomas R.; Jones, M. Gail; Andre, Thomas; Negishi, Atsuko; Minogue, James – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2006
To reduce curricular fragmentation in science education, reform recommendations include using common, unifying themes such as scaling to enhance curricular coherence. This study involved 215 participants from five groups (grades 5, 7, 9, and 12, and doctoral students), who completed written assessments and card sort tasks related to their…
Descriptors: Measures (Individuals), Educational Change, Science Education, Science Curriculum
Prohaska, Elizabeth – 1994
This paper explores the significance of experiential learning in promoting scholarship from a constructivist point of view. Chapter 1 examines the historical perspectives and educational theories that form the basis to experiential education. Chapter 2 explores the work of Jean Piaget, giving a description and explanation of his theories and how…
Descriptors: Behaviorism, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Constructivism (Learning)