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Peer reviewedSnow, James Steven; And Others – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1982
The ability of moderately mentally retarded children who received training on the relational concept of "between" to set self-performance standards was investigated with 14 Ss (mean age 11 years). Results indicated that the Ss learned concepts that allowed them to set appropriate or realistic self-performance standards. (Author/SW)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Generalization, Moderate Mental Retardation, Performance Factors
Filler, John; Kasari, Connie – Journal of the Association for the Severely Handicapped (JASH), 1981
Mothers of two severely handicapped infants were instructed via task analysis to teach their children three tasks. Results suggested that mothers learned quickly and children acquired, maintained, and generalized the desired responses. (CL)
Descriptors: Generalization, Infants, Mothers, Parent Education
Warren, Steven F.; And Others – Journal of the Association for the Severely Handicapped (JASH), 1981
The generalization of a previously trained interrogative response ("What's that?") was investigated in using eight severely retarded institutionalized individuals from 8 to 22 years old. (Author)
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Generalization, Institutionalized Persons, Severe Mental Retardation
Peer reviewedBlackman, Leonard S.; And Others – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1982
The effectiveness of a program, varying in presentation format, in promoting the acquisition and generalization of a verbal abstraction strategy was evaluated for 80 mildly retarded Ss (mean age 12 to 14 years). Although the acquisition and near generalization of the verbal abstraction strategy was advanced, no far generalization was observed.…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Generalization, Junior High Schools, Mild Mental Retardation
Peer reviewedOliver, Peter R.; Scott, Teri L. – Mental Retardation, 1981
Eight severely mentally handicapped adults were taught two adjective concepts--one adjective using group training and one adjective using individual instruction. Although group and individual training were equally effective in terms of rates of acquisition, generalization was 45 percent greater when exemplars of each adjective concept were taught…
Descriptors: Adults, Generalization, Group Instruction, Individual Instruction
Peer reviewedLuca-Marshall, Judith B. – Art Education, 1980
The author considers definitions of "aesthetic," especially that offered by Woodrow Wilson in his essay on Adam Smith. Her major contention is that too much of aesthetic and other education is not very aesthetic, for it does not excite both senses and intellect nor develop the ability to generalize. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Cognitive Development, Definitions, Elementary Secondary Education
Anderson, Stephen R.; Spradlin, Joseph E. – Journal of the Association for the Severely Handicapped (JASH), 1980
It was concluded that automatic generalization within or across response modalities is not necessarily an inevitable result and therefore may require explicit programing. (Author)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Classification, Exceptional Child Research, Generalization
Peer reviewedZuroff, David C. – Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1980
Rotter's social learning theory is applied to the learned helplessness paradigm, and is used to analyze (1) expectancy change processes occurring during helplessness training and (2) the generalization of those changes to other situations. Literature on individual and situational differences is also reviewed. (Author/SS)
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Expectation, Generalization, Helplessness
Peer reviewedLombardino, Linda J.; And Others – Exceptional Children, 1981
The authors address several issues pertinent to designing environmentally based total communication assessment and training programs for language delayed hearing children for whom oral language training alone is inadequate. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Generalization, Language Acquisition, Language Handicaps
Engelmann, Siegfried – Educational Technology, 1980
Discusses basic differences between cognitive and behavioral approaches to instructional design, emphasing the role of concept analysis in the design of instruction. (RAO)
Descriptors: Behavioral Sciences, Cognitive Development, Concept Teaching, Educational Strategies
Acquisition and Generalization of Instruction Following Behavior in Profoundly Retarded Individuals.
Peer reviewedIvy, Robert; Dubin, William – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1979
Acquisition occurred in a special therapy room, and instructions were presented in a fixed sequence. Ss were then tested in another room, where instructions were presented in a random sequence. Despite dramatic changes in the stimulus conditions, the Ss performed close to their asymptotic level. The reduction in number of acquisition trials did…
Descriptors: Generalization, Instruction, Learning, Mental Retardation
Peer reviewedSmith, Linda B. – Child Development, 1979
Investigated the development of classificatory organization. Two experiments examined age differences in children's spontaneous extensions of a classification and a third examined children's extensions under hypothesis-testing instructions. (JMB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewedMaor, Eli – Mathematics Teacher, 1979
Two well-known theorems from geometry are shown to be essentially the same using the principle of duality of lines and points. (MP)
Descriptors: Generalization, Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Instruction
Peer reviewedSmeets, Paul M.; Barnes, Dermot – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1997
Children and adults were trained and tested on formation of novel simple discriminations and conditional stimulus relations. Subjects who formed these sets were trained and tested on formation of stimulus equivalence classes. A modest majority of children matched directly paired stimuli; a few matched indirectly paired stimuli. All normal adults…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Conditioning, Discrimination Learning
Peer reviewedGolinkoff, Roberta Michnick; Chung, He Len; Hirsh-Pasek, Kathy; Liu, Jing; Bertenthal, Bennett I.; Brand, Rebecca; Maguire, Mandy J.; Hennon, Elizabeth – Developmental Psychology, 2002
Used point-light displays (lights corresponding to the joints of the human body) to examine 3-year-olds' understanding of verbs. Found that children could extend familiar motion verbs (walking, dancing) to videotaped point-light actions shown in an intermodal preferential looking paradigm. Children watched the action matching the requested verb…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Comparative Analysis, Generalization, Motion


