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Goldin-Meadow, Susan; Shield, Aaron; Lenzen, Daniel; Herzig, Melissa; Padden, Carol – Cognition, 2012
The manual gestures that hearing children produce when explaining their answers to math problems predict whether they will profit from instruction in those problems. We ask here whether gesture plays a similar role in deaf children, whose primary communication system is in the manual modality. Forty ASL-signing deaf children explained their…
Descriptors: Learning Readiness, Deafness, American Sign Language, Teaching Methods
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Cook, Susan Wagner; Mitchell, Zachary; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Cognition, 2008
The gestures children spontaneously produce when explaining a task predict whether they will subsequently learn that task. Why? Gesture might simply reflect a child's readiness to learn a particular task. Alternatively, gesture might itself play a role in learning the task. To investigate these alternatives, we experimentally manipulated…
Descriptors: Play, Learning Readiness, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Instruction
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Broaders, Sara C.; Cook, Susan Wagner; Mitchell, Zachary; Goldin-Meadow, Susan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2007
Speakers routinely gesture with their hands when they talk, and those gestures often convey information not found anywhere in their speech. This information is typically not consciously accessible, yet it provides an early sign that the speaker is ready to learn a particular task (S. Goldin-Meadow, 2003). In this sense, the unwitting gestures that…
Descriptors: Learning Readiness, Mathematics Instruction, Cognitive Processes, Nonverbal Communication
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Goldin-Meadow, Susan; And Others – Psychological Review, 1993
A model of the sources and consequences of mismatches between gestures and speech is presented that argues that the transitional knowledge state is the source of the mismatch and that such mismatches signal that a child is in a transitional state of concept acquisition and is ready to learn. (SLD)
Descriptors: Body Language, Child Development, Children, Cognitive Development