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Kate Cowan; Theo van Leeuwen; Staffan Selander – Global Studies of Childhood, 2024
This article considers ways in which toys have featured in children's play throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. Whilst often dismissed as trivial novelties, toys can be seen as a significant aspect of material culture, both reflecting and constructing ideas of childhood. A multimodal social semiotic perspective is used to examine a selection of toys…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Toys, Play
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Jess Uhre Rahbek – American Journal of Play, 2025
The author introduces the playful-tension model, a new theoretical concept, to harmonize the gap in play design between general play theory and its actual use in designing playthings. By synthesizing a broad selection of general play theory into a single theoretical concept, the playful-tension model accentuates the delicate interplay of what he…
Descriptors: Play, Theory Practice Relationship, Models, Design
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Neil J. Lambert; Xiaoting Luo; Akinyo Ola – Management Teaching Review, 2025
Effective teamwork is a crucial transferrable skill for students' learning experience during their studies and future careers. Understanding the making of effective teams, how teams differ from mere groups of individuals, and the potential value and challenges of diversity for team performance is essential for students as current and future team…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Toys, Diversity, Learning Activities
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Natalie Houston; Ferney Manrique; Shi Mo; Wang Ruoqian; Ji Wenjing; Lu Yuting – Discover Education, 2025
"Designing an effective educational toy" is a research project that emerged from a teaching and learning course designed to facilitate creative engagement both inside and outside the classroom at Wenzhou-Kean University in China. This research study examines the incorporation of design thinking concepts in the development of an…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Design, Toys
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Peter Cumber – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
A Slinky is a loose helical coil spring and is a well-known educational toy. In this paper a model for a Slinky is presented. The Slinky is represented as a sequence of rigid half coils connected by torsional springs. A range of Slinky configurations in static equilibrium are calculated. Where possible the torsion spring model is compared with the…
Descriptors: Toys, Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Scientific Concepts
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Rebeka Anna Zsoldos; Ildikó Király – Developmental Science, 2025
Pedagogy is seen as a "double-edged sword": it efficiently conveys information but may constrain the exploration of the causal structure of objects, suggesting that pedagogy and exploration are mutually exclusive learning processes. However, research on children's active involvement in concept acquisition implies that pedagogical signals…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Preschool Children, Information Seeking, Discovery Learning
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Toni Rose T. Agana; Tina M. Sidener; Nicole M. Rodriguez; Sharon A. Reeve; Heather M. Pane – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2025
Researchers have reported that children engage in pretend play that reflects the conventional activities of their environment (i.e., "learned-combinations play"). In contrast, children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) display fewer and less varied play behaviors. Research on teaching pretend play to children with ASD often involves…
Descriptors: Generalization, Play, Children, Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Ellis S. Cain; Rachel A. Ryskin; Chen Yu – Cognitive Science, 2025
According to the cross-situational learning account, infants aggregate statistical information from multiple parent naming events to resolve ambiguous word-referent mappings within individual naming events. While previous experimental studies have shown that infant and adult learners can build correct mappings based on statistical regularities…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Interaction, Infants, Inferences
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Hui Qiao; Jin Huang – Early Child Development and Care, 2023
This article describes and analyzes the findings of children's observation records of block play with a focus on the wide range of mathematical outcomes resulting from children's block play. To this end, children's mathematical learning was analyzed in five areas: set and classification; pattern and symmetry; number and arithmetic; comparison and…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Observation, Toys, Teaching Methods
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Jacqueline C. S. To; Karson T. F. Kung – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2025
Play, in particular sex-typical play, is important for affective, cognitive, and social development. There is limited research on sex-typical play in autistic children. The few prior studies on this topic relied heavily on reports or involvement of caregivers/parents, did not assess cognitive abilities, and examined a limited number of sex-typical…
Descriptors: Autism Spectrum Disorders, Play, Toys, Gender Differences
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Rocío Segura-Nebot; Soledad de Lemus; Andrea Baltar; Pilar Montañés Muro – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2025
From an early age, children internalize gender stereotypes and roles, which can influence their preferences, aspirations, and social interactions. This study aimed to test the effectiveness of an intervention using counter-stereotypical narratives to reduce gender stereotyping and its consequences at two developmental stages: before the period of…
Descriptors: Young Children, Play, Gender Differences, Sex Stereotypes
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Emily K. Farran; Katie A. Gilligan-Lee; Denis Mareschal; Marija Živkovic; Santa Bartuševica; Derek Bell; Tim Jay; Camilla Gilmore – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2025
There is robust evidence for a causal association between spatial thinking and mathematics achievement. However, most research has been lab-based, with spatial training delivered by researchers. We present a teacher delivered, whole-class 6-week spatial training study that involved professional development for practitioners coupled with…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Training, Instructional Effectiveness, Mathematics Achievement
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Sandra Chang-Kredl; Lisa Farley; Julie C. Garlen; Debbie Sonu – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2025
In this article, we highlight how adults remain emotionally involved with transitional objects, such as stuffed animals, carried over from their childhoods. Drawing on focus groups involving undergraduate students enrolled in teacher education and childhood studies programs, we found that the participants' reflections of their stuffed animals…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Toys, Manipulative Materials, Psychological Patterns
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Andres H. Mendez; Chen Yu; Linda B. Smith – Developmental Science, 2024
Traditionally, the exogenous control of gaze by external saliencies and the endogenous control of gaze by knowledge and context have been viewed as competing systems, with late infancy seen as a period of strengthening top-down control over the vagaries of the input. Here we found that one-year-old infants control sustained attention through head…
Descriptors: Infants, Eye Movements, Attention, Visual Learning
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Hanadi A. Chookah; Joseph S. Agbenyega; Ieda M. Santos; Claudine Habak – International Journal of Early Childhood, 2024
The use of natural and non-natural play materials in early childhood education is a critical facilitator to children's learning and development. Different materials vary in their affordances for sophisticated play, imagination, and creativity, which contribute to children's complex thinking; with the current focus on technology, it has been…
Descriptors: Play, Affordances, Toys, Preschool Children
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