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Peer reviewedAckerman, Brian P.; Rathburn, Jill – Child Development, 1984
Assesses the effect of same and different recognition experience intervening between acquisition and retrieval on cued recall for episodic information. Second and fourth graders and college adults were shown cue-target word pairs at acquisition and the cues alone at retrieval. In general, results showed that same experience facilitated memory for…
Descriptors: Age Differences, College Students, Context Effect, Cues
Peer reviewedMiller, Lynn Carol; And Others – Developmental Psychology, 1985
In order to determine how use of responsive listener cues (e.g. head nods, yesses, smiles, etc.) changes over preschool years, children were videorecorded as they listened to an adult speaker talk about his experiences. Age and sex differences in preschoolers' responsive behaviors are discussed as well as the relationship between the development…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Communication (Thought Transfer), Cues, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedAnderson-Levitt, Kathryn M. – Elementary School Journal, 1984
Focusing on one teacher's categorization of students'"searching" behavior, describes a case study drawn from ethnographic investigations of classrooms in France and offers a model of the interpretative process. (RH)
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Case Studies, Classification, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedDwyer, Francis M.; De Melo, Hermes – Journal of Experimental Education, 1984
This experiment was designed to investigate effect of verbal instruction alone vs. verbal instruction complemented by simple line drawings; effect of visual testing vs. nonvisual testing; effect of verbal cued vs. free recall on student achievement; effect of order of testing on subsequent achievement; and interaction among type of instruction,…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cues, Higher Education, Performance Factors
Breland, Hunter; Lee, Yong-Won; Najarian, Michelle; Muraki, Eiji – Educational Testing Service, 2004
This investigation of the comparability of writing assessment prompts was conducted in two phases. In an exploratory Phase I, 47 writing prompts administered in the computer-based Test of English as a Foreign Language[TM] (TOEFL[R] CBT) from July through December 1998 were examined. Logistic regression procedures were used to estimate prompt…
Descriptors: Writing Evaluation, Quality Control, Gender Differences, Writing Tests
PDF pending restorationPacific Region Educational Lab., Honolulu, HI. – 2002
This collection of 10 cue cards presents English translations of common English words and expressions into 10 Pacific Region languages: Palauan, Samoan, Chamorro, Hawaiian, Carolinian, Chuukese, Pohnpeian, Marshallese, Yapese, and Kosraean. The cards translate the following: hello, good morning, good afternoon, good night, thank you, you're…
Descriptors: Chamorro, Cues, Elementary Secondary Education, Hawaiian
Rivera, Ferdinand; Becker, Joanne Rossi – International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2003
In this report, we address the following questions: What aspects of information do preservice elementary teachers rely on when performing inductive reasoning? What contexts enable them to perceive the inherent invariant relationships from a finite sample and, thus, formulate viable generalizations? To what extent are they able to justify inductive…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Preservice Teachers, Cues, Models
Goularte, Renee – 2002
After reading self-selected books, students respond to reading in a journal and talk about their books daily in small, heterogeneous groups. The teacher guides and assesses students work by rotating among the groups, offering suggested response prompts and writing with them in their dialogue journals. During five 30-40 minute sessions, students…
Descriptors: Cues, Evaluation Methods, Journal Writing, Lesson Plans
Hamann, Janet M. – 2002
This paper describes three studies designed to determine whether beginning and completing teacher candidates reflected on their teaching experiences, in what categories they reflected, and how prompts affected their reflections. The research also noted whether teacher candidates' credential programs; modalities (Web site, e-mail, and paper…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cues, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedDavis, Clive M.; Carlson, Julia A. – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1970
Analyzes susceptibility of two African nationalities and American subjects to the Muller-Lyer illusion and suggests that the selective attention hypothesis fails to explain all cross-cultural differences, though instructional set may modify susceptibility. Tables and bibliography. (RW)
Descriptors: African Culture, American Culture, Attention, Behavioral Science Research
Turner, Philip M. – Educational Communication and Technology: A Journal of Theory, Research, and Development, 1983
Presents results of research into the relationship between two anxiety measures and performance on a visual concept acquisition task for university undergraduates. Analysis of variance indicates a significant interaction between cueing treatment and scores on the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. Further research using different populations and…
Descriptors: Affective Measures, Analysis of Variance, Anxiety, Arousal Patterns
Peer reviewedBrooks, Larry W.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1983
Two experiments examined the effects of embedded and intact (outline) headings on the processing of complex text material by college students. Results indicated that embedded headings reliably improved delayed test performance. It was further found that instructions in the use of headings as processing aids facilitated test performance. (Author/PN)
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Comprehension, Cues, Higher Education
Peer reviewedNyquist, Jody L.; Wulff, Donald H. – Journal of Classroom Interaction, 1982
Researchers used simultaneous feedback, a means of modifying behavior through verbal cues transmitted via a transistorized ear plug, to improve the teaching skills of university faculty engaged in the act of teaching. Faculty identified areas they wished to improve after viewing videotapes of their teaching. (Authors/PP)
Descriptors: Behavior Modification, College Instruction, Cues, Feedback
Peer reviewedContole, Julie; Over, Ray – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1981
Six infants were filmed at 15 and 30 weeks of age while alone and in the presence of an adult (mother or stranger) who interacted with the infant or remained passive. Signal detection analysis of ratings made by judges showed that infant behavior at both ages varied in accord with whether or not an adult was present. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cues, Foreign Countries, Infant Behavior
Peer reviewedWalker, Elaine – Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry and Allied Disciplines, 1981
The identification of facial expressions of emotion was studied in normal and psychiatrically disturbed children. Schizophrenic children were significantly less accurate than other children in emotion identification. Anxious-depressed children made more errors than unsocialized-aggressive and normal children. Normal and unsocialized-aggressive…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Aggression, Children, Comparative Analysis


