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Showing 1 to 15 of 31 results Save | Export
Angeline S. Lillard – Grantee Submission, 2023
Most American classrooms employ a teacher-text-centered model of instruction that is misaligned with the developmental science of how children naturally learn. This article reviews that science and the origins of the common instructional model, including three modifications intended to make it work better (grades, age-graded classrooms, and…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Astronomy, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Dike, Victor E. – Asian Journal of Education and Training, 2017
Debates on the effect of poverty on brain development in children and its implications for learning have been raging for decades. Research suggests that poverty affects brain development in children and that the implications for learning are more compelling today given the attention the issue has attracted. For instance, studies in the fields of…
Descriptors: Poverty, Brain, Child Development, Developmental Psychology
Nanmathi Manian; Wendy McColskey; Kim Benton; Noah Lipshie – National Comprehensive Center, 2021
School communities in both urban and rural settings need trauma-informed (TI) supports; however, the adversities experienced and access to student supports may be unique to rural school communities. In addition, the contextual challenges experienced by rural schools and communities, as well as the strengths that can be drawn from them, will…
Descriptors: Trauma, Rural Schools, Child Development, School Districts
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Darling-Hammond, Linda; Cook-Harvey, Channa M. – Learning Policy Institute, 2018
This brief reviews research demonstrating that student learning and development depend on affirming relationships operating within a positive school climate. It describes how such an environment can provide all children with a sense of safety and belonging by creating safe and culturally responsive classroom communities, connecting with families,…
Descriptors: Child Development, Holistic Approach, Interpersonal Relationship, Emotional Development
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Darling-Hammond, Linda; Cook-Harvey, Channa M. – Learning Policy Institute, 2018
New knowledge about human development from neuroscience and the sciences of learning and development demonstrates that effective learning depends on secure attachments; affirming relationships; rich, hands-on learning experiences; and explicit integration of social, emotional, and academic skills. Given that emotions and relationships strongly…
Descriptors: Child Development, Holistic Approach, Interpersonal Relationship, Emotional Development
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D'Arcangelo, Marcia – Educational Leadership, 2000
Neuropsychology professor Steven Petersen describes what scientists are finding out about brain development, synaptic growth and wiring, intentional and incidental learning, the role of emotion in learning, and declarative and implicit memory systems. Neuroscience has only the broadest outline of principles to offer today's educators. (MLH)
Descriptors: Brain, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education
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Proshansky, Etta W.; Proshansky, Harold M. – Social Policy, 1978
The basic assumption underlying the open classroom approach is the view that, among children of the same age and sex, significant differences (in temperament, rate of growth, background, experience, and personality dispositions) exist, and, therefore, educational methods must take these differences into account. (Author/MC)
Descriptors: Child Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Differences, Learning Activities
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Kaufman, Betsy B. – ETC: A Review of General Semantics, 1978
Proposes that the whole notion of equating time in a classroom with the quality of education is a semantic fiction; describes three perspectives on the learning process in children that provide an alternative to the "fixed schedule" metaphor. (GT)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Flexible Schedules
Kumarina, G. F.; And Others – Soviet Education, 1977
The author describes the qualitative features of learning by school pupils in Russia who have completed education under an experimental system. This is done through analysis of certain aspects of their school work in the middle and upper grades. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Child Development, Comparative Education, Curriculum Development, Educational Assessment
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Modell, John – Comparative Education Review, 1994
Introduces the theme of this issue, which expands comparative education topics inward, toward the developmental perspective of the child, and outward, toward culture, historically situated. Discusses findings from the International Assessment of Educational Progress in terms of cultural differences in children's attitudes toward learning. (KS)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Child Development, Comparative Education, Cultural Differences
Anderson, Richard C., Ed.; And Others – 1977
The conference from which the papers in this book are derived addressed the following questions: How is knowledge organized? How does knowledge develop? How is knowledge retrieved and used? What instructional techniques promise to facilitate the acquisition of new knowledge? Separate chapters address types of knowledge and purposes of education;…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Educational Research
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Herzog, John D. – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1984
Argues that schools are alien to human juveniles'"normal" ways of learning. Sees return to more "normal ways" because of near 100 percent literacy in West (so children can "pick up" necessary skills), counterproductivity of current social segregation of the young, and rejection of docility as an appropriate educational goal. (CMG)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Rearing, Educational Anthropology, Elementary Secondary Education
Jones, Lonna Bush – American Education, 1981
The Learning about Learning organization attempts to help children find and use their personal style of learning. Through creative arts activities, self-understanding and creative problem solving are fostered, and the relevance of arts skills to all areas of the curriculum and to daily living is demonstrated. (SK)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style
Ogletree, Earl J. – 1975
This paper presents an overview of the philosophy, psychology of learning, teaching methods, and curriculum of the Waldorf Schools. Most Waldorf teachers are influenced by the esoteric form of critical idealism propounded by Rudolf Steiner. The child is considered by Steiner to be a spiritual being who has reincarnated on to earth in a physical…
Descriptors: Child Development, Curriculum, Educational Innovation, Educational Methods
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Brandt, Ron – Educational Leadership, 2000
Sylwester says education must begin relying more on biology than social and behavioral science. All brain systems move from a slow, awkward functional level to a fast, efficient level. Contributions of metacognition, self-regulation, emotions, reflective and reflexive responses, comparison, and classification to cognitive development are…
Descriptors: Biology, Brain, Child Development, Classification
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