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Boadu, Gideon; Donnelly, Debra J. – Social Studies, 2020
History teaching and learning make intellectual demands on both teachers and students, requiring them to travel back in time and engage with complex issues and distant lifestyles. History education research advocates the use of approaches that portray History as an intellectually engaging subject but the application of cognitive research to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Cognitive Development, History Instruction, Piagetian Theory
Seleznyov, Sarah; Adhami, M.; Black, A.; Hodgen, J.; Twiss, S. – Education 3-13, 2022
The Cognitive Acceleration (or Let's Think) approach to mathematics teaching is a Piagetian programme drawing on Vygotsky's research, developed at King's College London over 30 years ago, along with its associated professional development (PD) programme. This project sought to replicate the original studies conducted 10-15 years earlier and before…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Learning Theories, Piagetian Theory, Faculty Development
Hanfstingl, Barbara; Benke, Gertraud; Zhang, Yuefeng – Educational Action Research, 2019
Lo's variation theory is a learning and teaching theory based on Marton's phenomenographic approach and is one of the most important backbones of learning studies. The proponents of variation theory demarcate their approach from constructivist learning approaches, stressing constructivism as philosophical framework, but not as learning theory. At…
Descriptors: Piagetian Theory, Learning Theories, Cognitive Development, Second Language Instruction
Crossland, John – Primary Science, 2015
Piaget's theories of the structure of knowledge, constructivist learning, and stages of development in thinking have been a cornerstone of cognitive psychology and teacher education for half a century (Piaget, 1983). More recently, his ideas about stages of cognitive development have received criticism from many quarters (Weiten, 1992), including…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Constructivism (Learning), Brain, Child Development
Ultanir, Emel – Online Submission, 2012
What people gain through sensation and cognition make up the individuals' experiences and knowledge. Individuals benefit from previous experiences when resolving problems. Knowledge is constructed from the meanings one attributes to nature and the environment. In theories, it means that constructers depend on observation and when directly…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Observation, Social Environment, Montessori Method
Simatwa, Enose M. W. – Educational Research and Reviews, 2010
Instructional management focuses on planning, execution and evaluation of learning experiences. For teachers in pre-secondary schools to plan, execute and evaluate learning experiences effectively, they need to have good understanding of the process of cognitive development in children. Piaget has postulated that children progress through a series…
Descriptors: Piagetian Theory, Intellectual Development, Teaching Methods, Learning Theories
Burton, Kelly Latham – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Preschool attendance is considered an important factor for predicting later success in literacy achievement. This quantitative ex-post facto study examined whether attendance of public prekindergarten is related to improved reading achievement in 2nd grade students in a rural, southeastern school district. The learning theories of Piaget, Bandura,…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Social Change, Comparative Analysis, Grade 2
Henning, John – 1998
The persistence of the constructivist agenda within learning and developmental theory suggests that underneath the seemingly disparate views of Piagetian, socioculturalist, and ecological perspectives lie some unifying concepts that find their mutual expression in constructivism. The paper contends that semiotics provides the conceptual means to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Learning Processes, Learning Theories
Gajdamaschko, Natalia – Educational Perspectives, 2006
Lev Vygotsky (1986-1934) was an educational theorist and psychologist of extraordinarily wide knowledge whose major writings deal with the entire learning-teaching-development experience. Despite a wide-ranging interest in Vygotskian theory, the issue of imagination remains outside of the main line of general inquiries into his work. Thus, there…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Imagination, Cognitive Development, Teaching Methods

Grobecker, Betsey – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1998
Questions the validity of current reductionist assumptions concerning learning differences and proposes a new science of life based on dynamic, transforming, hierarchically organized systems of energy. This view of cognition is related to Piaget's insights, which are extended to include a view of learning differences consistent with these…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences, Learning Disabilities
Kwon, Jaesool; Lee, Youngjick; Beeth, Michael E. – 2000
The purpose of this research was to find the relation between the level of cognitive conflict and students' conceptual change. In this study, 30 Korean high school students were selected from 450 10th graders by examining the pretest results. To create students' cognitive conflicts, two different strategies were used to foster anomalous…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Electricity, Foreign Countries, High Schools

Lourenco, Orlando; Machado, Armando – Psychological Review, 1996
This study attempts to rebut criticisms of the developmental theories of Jean Piaget by showing that most criticisms derive from misinterpretation and forget the dialectical, constructivist, and developmental nature of Piaget's work. Important aspects of Piaget's theory have not been assimilated by developmental psychologists. (SLD)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Developmental Psychology

Marcus, Gary F. – Cognition, 1998
Demonstrates that connectionist models described in "Rethinking Innateness" (Elman, et al., 1996) depend on innately assumed representations and do not offer a genuine alternative to nativism. Presents simulation results showing that the models are incapable of deriving genuine abstract representations that are not presupposed. Maintains…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Learning Processes, Learning Theories
Fenstermacher, Susan K.; Saudino, Kimberly J. – Developmental Review, 2006
Because early theoretical frameworks such as Piaget's stage model and social learning theory sought to explain the development and performance of imitation in terms of overall group trends, any evidence for individual differences in this behavior was until recently largely overlooked. Results of contemporary imitation studies have not only begun…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Developmental Stages, Socialization, Imitation
Niaz, Mansoor – 1991
This paper helps to clarify the role of empirical evidence in psychological and epistemological theories. Following Galileo's idealization, epistemological theories do not describe the behavior of individuals in the real world. It is only when the "impediments" of the real subjects are gradually removed by experimental manipulation that…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, Developmental Stages