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McKillip, William D. – 1975
This document explores some aspects of Competency Based Teacher Education (CBTE) in the area of elementary mathematics teaching methods. The essential and distinguishing features of CBTE are examined. The following topics are discussed in detail: (1) how competencies may be identified; (2) the effects of a competency orientation on methods…
Descriptors: Accountability, Cognitive Objectives, Competency Based Teacher Education, Elementary Education
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Menn, Lise – 1976
An interactionist-discovery theory of child phonology is proposed based on the following tenets: children invent their own phonological rules, and phonetic mastery is not automatically or generally in step with learning about phonemic contrasts. When a child learns the sound pattern of a language, there is constant interaction between the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Child Language, Discovery Processes, Generalization
Racle, Gabriel – 1977
This issue presents an article entitled "Suggestology and Management," by Gabriel Racle, which establishes a connection between the two fields and shows how a suggestological approach to management could help emphasize the value of the role and status of managers and those managed. In response to requests from readers of the newsletter,…
Descriptors: Administration, Bibliographies, Educational Innovation, Educational Theories
Northup, Terry – 1974
The writings of 33 authors in either curriculum theory or social studies are analyzed to determine whether each author supports structure-discovery views, reflective-inquiry views, or expresses views that tend to reflect both positions or neither position regarding the new approaches to teaching social studies. The structure-discovery method is…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Discovery Processes, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
McGaw, Dickinson – 1975
Personalized systems of instruction (PSI), also called individualized instruction or contingency-managed instruction, were developed in the mid-1960s at the college level by Fred Keller, a reinforcement learning theorist. The Keller plan consists of five features: self-pacing, unit mastery, student tutors, optional motivational lectures, and…
Descriptors: Contingency Management, Course Evaluation, Course Objectives, Course Organization
Resnick, Lauren B. – 1975
Task analysis as a tool in the design of instruction is the subject of this paper. Some of the major historical approaches (associationist/behaviorist, gestalt, and Piagetian) are described using examples from mathematics. The usefulness of these approaches to instructional design is evaluated on the basis of four criteria: instructional…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum Design, Educational Psychology, Elementary School Mathematics
McKillip, William; And Others – 1971
This module is divided into five sections, each of which emphasizes a different aspect of planning for using drill activities. These are "what we know about learning through drill,""drill: how and when to use it,""commercial materials for use in drill,""activities and games for use in drill," and "using new drill activities." There is a programed…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Drills (Practice), Educational Games, Elementary Education
Qafisheh, Hamdi A. – 1972
The linguistic situation in the Arabic-speaking world is briefly described, and variation and the factors that cause it are discussed. By reviewing the history of the literary language, it is shown that there exist no native speakers of the literary language, Modern Standard Arabic. The relaity is, rather, a classic case of diglossia. This reality…
Descriptors: Arabic, College Language Programs, Diglossia, Language Instruction
Cancino, Herlinda; And Others – 1974
Three hypotheses are examined in relation to English copula and negative utterances produced by three native Spanish speakers. The hypotheses are interference, interlanguage and L1=L2, which states that acquisition of a language by second language learners will parallel acquisiton of the same language by first language learners. The results of the…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, English (Second Language), Error Patterns, Interference (Language)
Dulay, Heidi; Burt, Marina – 1974
Previous work by the authors permitted them to hypothesize the existence of certain universal cognitive strategies that play a significant role in child second language acquisition. Forming the basis of the "creative construction process" in L2 learning, these strategies have heretofore remained unspecified. This paper offers new…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Child Language, Discovery Processes, Error Patterns
Geller, Sanford E.; And Others – 1975
This study investigated the relationship between visual attending and learning in a group of 16 Head Start children from low income families. Attending behavior (defined as "eyes oriented towards the teacher and/or teaching materials for a full 5-second interval") was measured for each child during a 10-minute story period on four…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attention, Attention Control, Contingency Management
Bate, Gwen M.; Pate, James L. – 1975
This study investigated the relative effectiveness of verbal and visual modes of presentation on the learning of paired-associates by 64 3-year-old and 64 8-year-old children. Nine pictorial paired-associates and 9 verbal paired-associates were formed from pictures or names of familiar objects. At each age level, 8 male and 8 female subjects were…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Learning Theories
Strevens, Peter – 1972
Teaching pronunciation is more like gymnastics than linguistics because it involves converting a series of mental processes into motor activity. Many variables contribute to the facility with which a student will learn pronunciation, but age causes the greatest variation in standards of pronunciation learning between individuals. Though increased…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Auditory Discrimination, English (Second Language), Language Instruction
Ausburn, Lynna J. – 1975
A study was designed to test the expectation that different individuals have different cognitive styles, which, if true, may be useful in investigating characteristics and psychological impacts of media utilization. Cognitive style refers to an individual's way of acquiring and processing information. Characteristics of the visual type and haptic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests, College Students, Conceptual Tempo
Ausburn, Floyd B. – 1975
A study was made to determine whether different methods of visual presentations would affect the retention rate of individuals with two distinct types of perception--visual and haptic. The visual type, according to a study by Viktor Lowenfeld in 1957, is marked by the following characteristics: (1) ability to see wholes, break them into visual…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Students, Educational Research, Higher Education
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