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Ferman Konukman; Andrew Sortwell; Bijen Filiz; Ertan Tüfekçioglu; Murat Erdogan; Emine Büsra Yilmaz – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2025
This article explores the value of teaching walking within the context of PE. It delves into the cognitive, psychomotor, and affective aspects of walking instruction, highlighting its multifaceted benefits for individuals across the lifespan.
Descriptors: Physical Education, Teaching Methods, Physical Activities, Cognitive Processes
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Wang, Lin; Shi, Donglin; Geng, Fengji; Hao, Xiaoxin; Chanjuan, Fu; Li, Yan – Journal of Educational Research, 2022
Coding learning involves cognitive control ability that enables children to coordinate behaviors according to internally maintained goals. However, such ability is still developing during early childhood and cannot reach maturity at least until late adolescence. This study aimed to test whether integrating cognitive control strategies into online…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Development, Self Control
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Paola Zanchi; Emeline Mullier; Eleonora Fornari; Priscille Guerrier de Dumast; Yasser Alemán-Gómez; Jean-Baptiste Ledoux; Roger Beaty; Patric Hagmann; Solange Denervaud – npj Science of Learning, 2024
Across development, experience has a strong impact on the way we think and adapt. School experience affects academic and social-emotional outcomes, yet whether differences in pedagogical experience modulate underlying brain network development is still unknown. In this study, we compared the brain network dynamics of students with different…
Descriptors: Experience, Brain, Children, Adolescents
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Dominic Wyse; Charlotte Hacking – Literacy, 2024
This paper presents a new theory and model of the teaching of decoding, reading and writing. The first part of the paper reviews a selection of influential models of learning to read and write that to varying degrees have been used as the basis for approaches to teaching, including the "Simple View of Reading." As well as noting some…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Reading Instruction, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Thomas, Jonathan Norris; Harkness, Shelly Sheats – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2019
Differing research worldviews have typically resulted in interpretations at odds with one another. Yet, leveraging distinct perspectives can lead to novel interpretations and theoretical construction. Via an empirically grounded research commentary, we describe the value of such activity through the lens of previously reported findings. This…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Numeracy
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Pérez-Marín, Diana; Hijón-Neira, Raquel; Pizarro, Celeste – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2022
Significant interest in teaching children to code since Preschool Education has arisen in recent years. This paper focuses on the benefits of preschoolers learning to code at such short age. The research questions are whether by coding they can improve skills such as sequencing and plotting a route? Which factors influence the learning? And, to…
Descriptors: Programming, Early Childhood Education, Preschool Children, Thinking Skills
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Danielle Mattson; Kathryn Kryska; Jacqueline Pei; Claire Coles; Julie Kable; Molly Millians; Gail Andrew; Damien Cormier; Carmen Rasmussen – Canadian Journal of School Psychology, 2024
Math development in children relies on several underlying cognitive functions, including executive functions (EF), working memory (WM), and visual-motor abilities, such as visual-motor integration (VMI). Understanding how these cognitive factors contribute to children's math performance is critical to supporting math learning and long-term math…
Descriptors: Mathematical Aptitude, Children, Neurodevelopmental Disorders, Cognitive Processes
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Carter, J. Adam – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
What cognitive goods do children plausibly have a right to in an education? In attempting to answer this question, I begin with a puzzle centred around Joel Feinberg's observation that a denial of certain cognitive goods can violate a child's right to an open future. I show that propositionalist, dispositionalist and objectualist characterisations…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Cognitive Processes, Student Needs, Educational Philosophy
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Melody García-Moya; Rocío Blanco – Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities, 2024
Mathematical problem-solving is a core content of primary school education. Therefore, it is necessary to provide all students with a meaningful way of acquisition of problem-solving skills. The objective of this research was to verify the effectiveness of a problem-solving routine based on the Pólya's model and the use of cognitive strategies…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Problem Solving, Elementary School Students, Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Liu, Yue; Wang, Chuang; Liu, Jian; Liu, Hongyun – Educational Psychology, 2022
The primary goals of this study are to investigate if cognitive activation increases mathematics self-efficacy, which in turn alleviates anxiety and to examine the moderating role of internal migrant status. Hierarchical linear models and multilevel structural equation models were employed to datasets of 3088 fourth graders from 57 classrooms in…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Self Efficacy, Mathematics Anxiety, Migrant Children
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Falloon, Garry – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2020
Research has explored the use of simulations for education and training, and attention is turning to how they might support learning in school subjects such as mathematics and science. However, existing studies have mostly concentrated on older students, and if simulations help build knowledge useful for solving problems "within" the…
Descriptors: Simulation, Transfer of Training, Young Children, Equipment
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Theodore P. Zanto; Anastasia Giannakopoulou; Courtney L. Gallen; Avery E. Ostrand; Jessica W. Younger; Roger Anguera-Singla; Joaquin A. Anguera; Adam Gazzaley – Developmental Science, 2024
Musical instrument training has been linked to improved academic and cognitive abilities in children, but it remains unclear why this occurs. Moreover, access to instrument training is not always feasible, thereby leaving less fortunate children without opportunity to benefit from such training. Although music-based video games may be more…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Musical Instruments, Music, Language Rhythm
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Vilnite, Fiona Mary; Marnauza, Mara – Music Education Research, 2023
Mental training has been employed successfully by experienced musicians, but rarely explored with younger learners. Considering its benefits, however, including the use and development of predictive, feedforward processes, identified in neuroscience as being central to playing a musical instrument, this mixed qualitative-quantitative study…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Training, Music Education, Musical Instruments
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Fauske, Ragnhild Heidi – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2023
This article builds on a qualitative study of interactions and negotiations with respect to existential questions in an ECEC department with children from 3 to 6 years of age, as part of a larger empirical study on the same topic. In the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research's 2017 curriculum for Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC),…
Descriptors: Young Children, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Philosophy
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Thenmozhi, C. – Shanlax International Journal of Education, 2019
Thinking is a common process. Cognitive ability includes knowledge, memory and metacognition. Knowledge requires memory. These two are inextricably linked. Parents and teachers need to encourage children to take an active role in their learning and show them how to use what they know to the best advantage. Cognition is primarily a mental process.…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Cognitive Ability, Knowledge Level, Memory
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