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Céline Poletti; Marie Krenger; Marie Létang; Brune Hennequin; Catherine Thevenot – Child Development, 2025
Our study on 328 five- to six-year-old kindergarteners (mainly White European living in France, 152 girls) shows that children who do not count on their fingers and undergo finger counting training exhibit drastic improvement in their addition skills from pre-test to post-test (i.e., accuracy from 37.3% to 77.1%) compared to a passive control…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Young Children, Foreign Countries, Mathematics Skills
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van den Berg, Linda; Libertus, Klaus; Nyström, Pär; Gottwald, Janna. M.; Licht, Victoria; Gredebäck, Gustaf – Child Development, 2022
Several studies have previously investigated the effects of sticky mittens training on reaching and grasping development. However, recent critique casted doubts on the robustness of the motor effect of this training. The current study presents a pre-registered report that aimed to generalize these effects to Swedish infants. Three-month-old…
Descriptors: Infants, Psychomotor Skills, Parent Participation, Training
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Gilligan-Lee, Katie A.; Hawes, Zachary C. K.; Williams, Ashley Y.; Farran, Emily K.; Mix, Kelly S. – Child Development, 2023
Studies show that spatial interventions lead to improvements in mathematics. However, outcomes vary based on whether physical manipulatives (embodied action) are used during training. This study compares the effects of embodied and non-embodied spatial interventions on spatial and mathematics outcomes. The study has a randomized, controlled,…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Manipulative Materials, Instructional Effectiveness, Training
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Arslan, Burcu; Verbrugge, Rineke; Taatgen, Niels; Hollebrandse, Bart – Child Development, 2020
One-hundred-six 5-year-olds' (M[subscript age] = 5;6; SD = 0.40) were trained with second-order false belief tasks in one of the following conditions: (a) "feedback with explanation"; (b) "feedback without explanation"; (c) "no feedback"; (d) "active control." The results showed that there were significant…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Abstract Reasoning, Beliefs, Training
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Sandoval, Michelle; Leclerc, Julia A.; Gómez, Rebecca L. – Child Development, 2017
A nap soon after encoding leads to better learning in infancy. However, whether napping plays the same role in preschoolers' learning is unclear. In Experiment 1 (N = 39), 3-year-old habitual and nonhabitual nappers learned novel verbs before a nap or a period of wakefulness and received a generalization test examining word extension to novel…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Sleep, Verbs, Generalization
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Christoforides, Michael; Spanoudis, George; Demetriou, Andreas – Child Development, 2016
This study trained children to master logical fallacies and examined how learning is related to processing efficiency and fluid intelligence (gf). A total of one hundred and eighty 8- and 11-year-old children living in Cyprus were allocated to a control, a limited (LI), and a full instruction (FI) group. The LI group learned the notion of logical…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Logical Thinking, Cognitive Processes, Intelligence
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Roseberry, Sarah; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Golinkoff, Roberta M. – Child Development, 2014
Language learning takes place in the context of social interactions, yet the mechanisms that render social interactions useful for learning language remain unclear. This study focuses on whether social contingency might support word learning. Toddlers aged 24-30 months (N = 36) were exposed to novel verbs in one of three conditions: live…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Language Acquisition, Verbs, Interactive Video
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Campione, Joseph C. – Child Development, 1971
Descriptors: Discrimination Learning, Perception, Preschool Children, Redundancy
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Brainerd, Charles J.; Allen, Terry Walter – Child Development, 1971
Descriptors: Conservation (Concept), Density (Matter), Feedback, Grade 5
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Jacobs, Paul I.; Vandeventer, Mary – Child Development, 1971
Brief training sessions can improve first-graders' performance on double-classification problems. Questions are raised about whether or not the basic intellectual ability underlying performance has also been increased. (WY)
Descriptors: Grade 1, Learning, Logical Thinking, Pictorial Stimuli
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Cosgrove, J. Michael; Patterson, Charlotte J. – Child Development, 1978
Investigated both immediate and delayed effects of two training procedures on the listener behavior of first grade children in a referential communication setting. The effects of variations in the presence and absence of (1) a plan for effective listening and (2) modeling of appropriate listener behavior were assessed. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Elementary School Students, Listening Skills, Modeling (Psychology)
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Brainderd, Charles J. – Child Development, 1974
Preschool children were trained to acquire transitivity, conservation, and class inclusion of length via feedback to their judgments. Feedback was found to facilitate the learning of all three concepts. (ST)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept), Feedback, Intellectual Development
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Birman, Karen Linn – Child Development, 1986
Examines videotaped excerpts of treatment sessions from an intervention study to explore the changes occurring during social skills training and their relation to treatment outcome. Children who received social skills training displayed more conversational skills and received more positive peer support than children who were not coached.…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Competence, Intervention, Peer Relationship, Preadolescents
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Field, Dorothy – Child Development, 1977
This study examined the effects of providing training in identity, reversibility, and compensation explanations, alone and in every combination, for eight matched groups of 48 mildly retarded, nonconserving children. (Author/JMB)
Descriptors: Conservation (Concept), Handicapped Children, Mental Retardation, Research
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Rieser, John J. – Child Development, 1979
Apparently, six-month-old infants can encode a location relative to a landmark, but in many situations their visual search behavior is dominated by a learned egocentric code. (RH)
Descriptors: Egocentrism, Infants, Orientation, Spatial Ability
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