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Zamuner, Tania S.; Strahm, Stephanie; Morin-Lessard, Elizabeth; Page, Michael P. A. – Developmental Science, 2018
This research investigates the effect of production on 4.5- to 6-year-old children's recognition of newly learned words. In Experiment 1, children were taught four novel words in a produced or heard training condition during a brief training phase. In Experiment 2, children were taught eight novel words, and this time training condition was in a…
Descriptors: Young Children, Vocabulary Development, Language Acquisition, Word Recognition
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Kenney, Susan Hobson – General Music Today, 2013
“Let’s do it again,” shout the children as they complete an activity in music class. A casual observer would be aware that the children are fully engaged but may not be sure of the lesson focus. Is it to help children learn a new orchestra piece? To teach about the beat? To teach form? To teach rhythm? To teach children to read a music score? To…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music Activities, Teaching Methods, Movement Education
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Ali-Khan, Carolyne – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2011
As knowledge production, interpretation, and representation in educational settings rolls along Guttenberg's (text-based) track, the twenty-first-century world outside the doors of the schools and universities is exploding with visual ways of knowing and being. As visual text is silenced in education, it is simultaneously exploited in the…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Epistemology, Visual Perception, Visual Stimuli
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Lee, Joohi; Lee, Joo Ok; Fox, Jill – Childhood Education, 2009
According to Piaget, 5- or 6-year-old children gradually acquire the concept of time based on events (Piaget, 1969). In his experiment of investigating children's time concepts, Piaget found that children of these ages were able to place pictures based on sequential events with some errors; the younger children made more errors. The National…
Descriptors: Young Children, Time, Teaching Methods, Concept Formation
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Plavnick, Joshua B.; Ferreri, Summer J. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2011
Previous research suggests that language-training procedures for children with autism might be enhanced following an assessment of conditions that evoke emerging verbal behavior. The present investigation examined a methodology to teach recognizable mands based on environmental variables known to evoke participants' idiosyncratic communicative…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Verbal Stimuli, Autism, Training
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Wang, Lin – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2004
In this article, the author discusses how to improve a child's motor skills through listening by using three simple steps--recording the auditory model, determining when to use the auditory model, and considering where to use the auditory model. She points out the importance of using a demonstration technique that helps learners understand the…
Descriptors: Listening Skills, Child Development, Teaching Methods, Models
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Norman, Jackie – British Journal of Visual Impairment, 2004
A follow-up account of a mother's attempts to provide her blind daughter, now aged six, with knowledge of the physical world through the manipulation of three-dimensional objects and two-dimensional tactile representations. The case is made for the value of pictures to the development of children's understanding in general; and for the child who…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Blindness, Stimuli, Tactual Perception
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Boyer, W. A. R. – Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 1997
Explored the effectiveness of an intervention program designed by the researcher to enhance playfulness, using sensorial stimulation. Found that the effectiveness of the playfulness training interventions is an important theoretical result that provides support for a model of teaching and learning that includes the enhancement of playfulness.…
Descriptors: Child Development, Motivation, Perceptual Development, Play