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Lowrie, Tom; Logan, Tracy – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2007
One way of providing middle-school students with the opportunity to engage in realistic activities is to ensure that mathematical concepts and ideas can be taught and expressed in contexts closer to students' own experiences. Students are expected to learn serious, substantive mathematics in classrooms in which the emphasis is on thoughtful…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving
Honig, Alice – Young Children, 2007
Play is children's work. Alice Honig enumerates from the heart 10 ways in which children learn through play, including building dexterity; social skills; cognitive and language skills; number and time concepts; spatial understanding; reasoning of cause and effect; clarification of pretend versus real; sensory and aesthetic appreciation; extended…
Descriptors: Language Skills, Time, Separation Anxiety, Dramatic Play
Schwartz, Neil H.; Verdi, Michael P.; Morris, Terra D.; Lee, Tiffany R.; Larson, Nikki K. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2007
Fifty-five undergraduate students read pages on a website presenting text about familiar and unfamiliar geographic locations in the United States. Learners navigated the site by having available or unavailable navigational buttons showing the cardinal compass directions between the map locations in the presence or absence of a cartographic map…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Familiarity, Geographic Location, Mnemonics
Roberts, A. S. – Educational Psychology, 2007
The link between academic performance in secondary education and the subsequent performance of students studying architecture at university level is commonly questioned by educators and admissions tutors. This paper investigates the potential for using measures of cognitive style and spatial ability as predictors of future potential in…
Descriptors: Architectural Education, Secondary Education, Higher Education, Academic Achievement
Poliakoff, Ellen; Miles, Eleanor; Li, Xinying; Blanchette, Isabelle – Cognition, 2007
Viewing a threatening stimulus can bias visual attention toward that location. Such effects have typically been investigated only in the visual modality, despite the fact that many threatening stimuli are most dangerous when close to or in contact with the body. Recent multisensory research indicates that a neutral visual stimulus, such as a light…
Descriptors: Cues, Attention Control, Pictorial Stimuli, Spatial Ability
Cirino, Paul T.; Morris, Mary K.; Morris, Robin D. – Assessment, 2007
Semantic retrieval (SR) and executive-procedural (EP), but not visuospatial (VS) skills, have been found to be uniquely predictive of mathematical calculation skills in a sample of clinically referred college students. This study set out to cross-validate these results in an independent sample of clinically referred college students (N = 337) as…
Descriptors: Remedial Mathematics, College Mathematics, Memory, Semantics
Lance W. Gibbon – ProQuest LLC, 2007
In this quasi-experimental study, 142 fifth and sixth grade students at a suburban elementary school in Northwest Washington State participated in a week-long, 10-hour project using the "LEGO Mindstorms Robotics Invention System" (RIS). Partners constructed and programmed one robot from visually-based LEGO instructions and a second of…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Grade 6, Toys, Convergent Thinking
Linehan, Anne – 1992
The purpose of this book is to introduce the geoboard as an effective tool that can help young children understand geometry as they develop spatial sense and mathematical thinking. Activities are clustered into three main sections: beginning geoboard explorations, exploring polygons, and coordinates. Blackline masters are included. (MKR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Geometry, Learning Activities, Lesson Plans
Decker, Sadie N. – 1982
A Study was conducted to test the hypothesis proposed by J. S. Symmes and J. L. Rapoport that a sex-linked recessive gene might account for the good spatial ability found among dyslexic readers, the familial pattern of the disorder, and the frequently reported sex ratio of three affected males to one female. Spatial/reasoning ability scores were…
Descriptors: Dyslexia, Elementary Secondary Education, Females, Heredity
Hazen, Nancy L.; Volk-Hudson, Suse – 1979
Two studies were conducted to determine whether preschool children automatically use spatial context to aid recall of objects or whether the ability to use spatial context as a retrieval aid is a deliberate mnemonic strategy that develops later. In the first experiment, a total of 32 children (16 aged 3 and 16 aged 4) participated in a memory task…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Context Effect, Cues, Preschool Children
Presson, Clark C. – 1983
Reported are research findings that (1) illustrate the importance of primary spatial orientation for children's and adults' use of symbolic spatial skills and (2) indicate the importance of the distinction between primary and secondary spatial orientation. At least two major ways exist in which humans gather and use spatial information. The…
Descriptors: Adults, Children, Cognitive Development, Egocentrism
Savolainen, Reijo – Information Research: An International Electronic Journal, 2006
Introduction: This paper investigates the ways in which spatial factors have been approached in information seeking studies. The main attention was focused on studies discussing information seeking on the level of source selection and use. Method: Conceptual analysis of about 100 articles and books thematizing spatial issues of information…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Information Seeking, Research Reports, Information Sources
Bartlett, Albert A. – Physics Teacher, 2006
Several times a week I walk by a metal chair that is fastened to a flat concrete slab at an outdoor bus stop here in Boulder. One day I noticed on the concrete a nice shadow image of the woven metal seat of the chair (Fig. 1). The seat and back of the chair are formed from 3.8-cm wide strips of metal spaced 3.8 cm apart. The seat is about 39 cm…
Descriptors: Measurement, Spatial Ability, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles
Zimowski, Michele F.; Wothke, Werner – 1986
Two processing abilities used to solve spatial problems are examined: (1) the analog ability of structural visualization; and (2) the non-analog ability of verbal analytic reasoning. The distinction is based on an evaluation of information processing theory and a review of process-oriented studies of individual differences. Criteria are presented…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Individual Differences, Sex Differences, Spatial Ability
Mislevy, Robert J.; Verhelst, Norman – 1987
A model is presented for item responses when different examinees use different strategies to arrive at their answers and when only those answers, not choice or strategy or subtask results, can be observed. Using substantive theory to differentiate the likelihoods of response vectors under a fixed set of solution strategies, responses are modeled…
Descriptors: Guessing (Tests), Latent Trait Theory, Maximum Likelihood Statistics, Models

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