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Copeland, Anne P.; Wisniewski, Nadine M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Performance on tasks of memory and of attention was consistently interrelated for nonlearning disabled children and less consistently so for learning disabled subjects. Hyperactivity was also related to poorer performance on the cognitive measures. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention Span, Children, Elementary Education
Hall, Donald M.; Geis, Mary Fulcher – 1976
The mnemonic consequences of semantic, acoustic, and orthographic encoding and the relationships between encoding and retrieval cues were investigated in an incidental-learning experiment involving 24 first-, third-, and fifth-grade pupils. Each child was asked one orienting question for each of 18 words; the questions differed in the type of…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Cues, Elementary Education, Incidental Learning

Ghatala, Elizabeth S. – Developmental Psychology, 1984
Tests second- and sixth-grade students' incidental memory for words under acoustic- and semantic-processing conditions. The findings were predicted by an associative-processing account of incidental memory previously advanced by Ghatala (1981) and indicate that both knowledge-base development and processing activity determine children's incidental…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Encoding (Psychology)

Elliott, Stephen N.; Carroll, James L. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1982
Memory of incidentally learned material was investigated across three developmental levels in immediate and delay conditions. Incidental learning increased with age with or without specific instructions, suggesting that previously reported divergent developmental trends may not be the result of the type of paradigm. (Author.PN)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Elementary Education, Grade 1, Grade 6
Hillman, Stephen B. – 1979
The study examined the effects of questions on learning among 90 intermediate level educable mentally retarded children. Four types of learning were identified as relevant remembering, incidental remembering, relevant inferring, and incidental inferring. Results indicated that question position was an important variable in influencing the learning…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research, Incidental Learning, Intermediate Grades

Aman, Michael G.; Turbott, Sarah H. – Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1986
Thirty-two hyperactive children (ages 5-11) and 32 controls were tested on (1) a component selection task, measuring serial memory and incidental learning and (2) a cancellation task, assessing attentional variables and distractibility. It was concluded that a deficit in sustained attention and impulsivity best described the group differences.…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Disorders, Attention Span, Cognitive Style, Conceptual Tempo

Evans, Robert C. – Journal of Experimental Education, 1980
First, third, and eighth graders performed four different orienting activities to different words. Under an incidental learning paradigm, the children's recognition was tested after the orienting activity. Age differences in recognition were absent, and the effect of the orienting activity responses on recognition supported depth of processing…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Elementary Education

Copeland, Anne P.; Moll, Nadine W. – 1979
The differences in performance on a variety of cognitive measures were studied in 67 learning disabled (LD) and normal elementary school children. Younger and older Ss were administered tests of conceptual sorting, central and incidental learning, and selective attention. Teacher ratings of classroom hyperactive behavior were also examined. LD Ss…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Behavior, Classification

Rousell, Michael A.; Gillis, David – Guidance & Counselling, 1994
Normal fluctuations in consciousness and spontaneous trance states may produce inadvertent hypnotic influence in the classroom. Two case studies illustrate how students may be thus influenced by explicit or implicit suggestions, resulting in subsequent self-defeating behaviors. These cases were successfully treated by reconstructing earlier…
Descriptors: Arousal Patterns, Classroom Environment, Counseling Techniques, Elementary Education
Elliott, Stephen N.; Carroll, James L. – 1979
Memory of incidentally learned material was investigated across three developmental levels in immediate and 24-hour delay conditions. First grade, sixth grade, and college students were assigned randomly within developmental level to one of four experimental conditions: Type I immediate, Type I delay, Type II immediate, or Type II delay. In the…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Elementary Education, Higher Education