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Peer reviewedSpodek, Bernard; Saracho, Olivia N. – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2003
Discusses trends in early childhood education rooted in much older traditions, such as the project approach and Reggio Emilia approach, as well as the history of Head Start, and other changes in early childhood programs and services. Considers the need for practitioners to understand the theoretical and ideological foundations of pedagogical…
Descriptors: Child Development Centers, Curriculum Development, Early Childhood Education, Educational Change
Howley, Mary; Howe, Christine – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Recent research using theory-of-mind tasks has rekindled interest in the possibility that social interaction makes a significant contribution to cognitive development. It is proposed here that this contribution may be most pronounced with phenomena that, like belief or affective states, are internal and abstract. A more modest contribution is…
Descriptors: Deafness, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Cognitive Development
Montgomery, Derek E.; Lightner, Melisa – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Four studies examined 3- and 4-year-olds' ability to judge accurately whether they acted intentionally. Children self-initiated action to attain an outcome, or their arm was moved by the experimenter to create an outcome. In Experiment 3, children in both age groups accurately claimed they were agents of self-guided action but not of passive…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Cognitive Development, Young Children, Experimental Psychology
Siegler, Robert S. – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2004
Interest in U-shaped development has itself undergone a U-shaped progression. Twenty-five years ago, interest in U-shaped development was high. This interest was evident at a 1978 conference in Tel Aviv on "U-shaped Behavioral Growth" that resulted in the publication of a book of the same title 4 years later (Strauss, 1982). The breadth…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Individual Development, Cognitive Development, Child Development
Smith, Bruce – Applied Psycholinguistics, 2006
Using nonword repetition tasks as an experimental approach with both adults and children has become quite common in the past 10 to 15 years for studying lexical learning and phonological processing (e.g., Bailey & Hahn, 2001; Gathercole, Frankish, Pickering & Peaker, 1998; Munson, Edwards, & Beckman, 2005; Storkel, 2001; Vitevich & Luce, 2005). In…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Task Analysis, Repetition, Evaluation Methods
Rosenkoetter, Sharon E.; Knapp-Philo, Joanne – Zero to Three (J), 2004
The infant-toddler years are incredibly important in producing a nation of readers. Every family can, in culturally appropriate ways, help infants and toddlers learn to read the world. Every caregiver can, in culturally appropriate ways, help infants and toddlers grow in language and literacy. The authors argue that early childhood programs must…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Toddlers, Infants, Reading Instruction
Parlakian, Rebecca – Zero to Three (J), 2004
For infants and toddlers, education and care are "two sides of the same coin." The author briefly reviews current research on the importance of relationships to cognitive development and early language and literacy. Instructional strategies that are most appropriate to the early years include "intentionality" and "scaffolding." Intentionality…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Infants, Emergent Literacy, Cognitive Development
Askell-Williams, Helen; Lawson, Michael J. – International Education Journal, 2004
This paper describes the application of correspondence analysis to transcripts gathered from focussed interviews about teaching and learning held with a small sample of child-care students, medical students and the students' teachers. Seven dimensions emerged from the analysis, suggesting that the knowledge that underlies students' learning…
Descriptors: Medical Students, Social Sciences, Data Analysis, Classification
Holmes, Gregory L. – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2004
Both clinical and laboratory studies demonstrate that seizures early in life can result in permanent behavioral abnormalities and enhance epileptogenicity. Understanding the critical periods of vulnerability of the developing nervous system to seizure-induced changes may provide insights into parallel or divergent processes in the development of…
Descriptors: Seizures, Etiology, Anatomy, Brain
Blume, Warren T. – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2004
Lennox-Gastaut (L-G) syndrome is an intractable generalized epilepsy of childhood onset, associated with spike waves at a slow rate and paroxysmal fast activity. These epileptiform discharge patterns are thought to reflect excessive neocortical excitability and arise from neuronal and synaptic features peculiar to the immature central nervous…
Descriptors: Seizures, Brain, Social Isolation, Cognitive Development
Haydar, Tarik F. – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2005
Studies on human patients and animal models of disease have shown that disruptions in prenatal and early postnatal brain development are a root cause of mental retardation. Since proper brain development is achieved by a strict spatiotemporal control of neurogenesis, cell migration, and patterning of synapses, abnormalities in one or more of these…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Patients, Etiology, Brain
Sundaram, Senthil K.; Chugani, Harry T.; Chugani, Diane C. – Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities Research Reviews, 2005
Positron emission tomography (PET) is a technique that enables imaging of the distribution of radiolabeled tracers designed to track biochemical and molecular processes in the body after intravenous injection or inhalation. New strategies for the use of radiolabeled tracers hold potential for imaging gene expression in the brain during development…
Descriptors: Genetic Disorders, Mental Retardation, Developmental Disabilities, Genetics
Duran, Pilar; Malvern, David; Richards, Brian; Chipere, Ngoni – Applied Linguistics, 2004
This article discusses issues in measuring lexical diversity, before outlining an approach based on mathematical modelling that produces a measure, D, designed to address these problems. The procedure for obtaining values for D directly from transcripts using software (vocd) is introduced, and then applied to thirty-two children from the Bristol…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Applied Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Academic Discourse
Samuelsson, Ingrid Pramling; Sheridan, Sonja – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2004
In Sweden most of the young children are in preschool from early years. The government has taken responsibility by introducing different reforms such as child allowance, maternity leave, access to preschool for all children etc. Preschool (in Sweden for children aged 1-5 years and preschool class for 6 years old) is, since 1998, the first step in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, National Curriculum, Educational Quality
Mcduffie, Andrea S.; Yoder, Paul J.; Stone, Wendy L. – Autism: The International Journal of Research & Practice, 2006
This study used an intact group comparison to examine attention following in 34 children aged 2 years diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) matched pairwise for vocabulary comprehension with a group of typically developing toddlers. For both groups of children, the presence of verbal labels during a referential task increased attention to…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Comparative Analysis, Attention, Toddlers

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