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Rubin, Barry M.; Krishnan, Shanker – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2004
Two faculty in business and public and environmental affairs find that students need to move between personal-based experience, data, and a higher level of analytical reasoning. Their teaching of marketing and statistics is shown to benefit from the structured analysis and detailed assessments of the Decoding the Disciplines model.
Descriptors: College Faculty, Consumer Economics, Marketing, Sampling
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Tarlowski, Andrzej – Cognitive Development, 2006
To claim that young children's biological thought is anthropocentric or that their induction depends on similarity rather than categories is to overlook the role of experience in reasoning. We tested four groups of 4-year-olds differing in two aspects of exposure to biological information: (a) their direct experience with nature (urban versus…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Animals, Preschool Children, Thinking Skills
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Rai, Roshan; Mitchell, Peter – Child Development, 2006
Do young children appreciate the importance of access to premises when judging what another person knows? In Experiment 1, 5-year-olds (N=31) were sensitive to another person's access to premises when predicting that person's ability to point to a target after eliminating alternatives in a set of 3 cartoon characters. Experiment 2 replicated the…
Descriptors: Inferences, Cartoons, Young Children, Access to Information
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Lea, R. Brooke; Mulligan, Elizabeth J.; Walton, Jennifer Lee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
According to current psychological models of deduction, people can draw inferences on the basis of information that they receive from different sources at different times. In 3 reading-comprehension experiments, the authors demonstrated that premises that appear far apart in a text (distant) are not accessed and are therefore not used as a basis…
Descriptors: Inferences, Reading Comprehension, Memory, Psychological Studies
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White, Brian – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This paper presents a generally applicable method for characterizing subjects' hypothesis-testing behaviour based on a synthesis that extends on previous work. Beginning with a transcript of subjects' speech and videotape of their actions, a Reasoning Map is created that depicts the flow of their hypotheses, tests, predictions, results, and…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Hypothesis Testing, Biology, Maps
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Farrington-Flint, Lee; Wood, Clare; Canobi, Katherine H.; Faulkner, Dorothy – Journal of Research in Reading, 2004
Despite compelling evidence that analogy skills are available to beginning readers, few studies have actually explored the possibility of identifying individual differences in young children's analogy skills in early reading. The present study examined individual differences in children's use of orthographic and phonological relations between…
Descriptors: Beginning Reading, Logical Thinking, Young Children, Thinking Skills
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Grant, Cathy M.; Riggs, Kevin J.; Boucher, Jill – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2004
The contributions of counterfactual conditional reasoning (CCR), belief understanding, and inferential reasoning to the performance of children with autism (CWA) on standard false belief tasks were investigated. To assess the roles of these three factors, we compared the performance of CWA on physical-state CCR tasks (which do not require either…
Descriptors: Children, Autism, Beliefs, Child Psychology
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Van der Henst, Jean-Baptiste; Schaeken, Walter – Cognition, 2005
Literature on relational reasoning mainly focuses on the performance question. It is typically argued that problem difficulty relies on the number of ''mental models'' compatible with the problem. However, no study has ever investigated the wording of conclusions that participants formulate. In the present work, we analyze the relational terms…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking, Abstract Reasoning, Spatial Ability
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Smith, Carol L.; Solomon, Gregg E. A.; Carey, Susan – Cognitive Psychology, 2005
Clinical interviews administered to third- to sixth-graders explored children's conceptualizations of rational number and of certain extensive physical quantities. We found within child consistency in reasoning about diverse aspects of rational number. Children's spontaneous acknowledgement of the existence of numbers between 0 and 1 was strongly…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Numbers, Concept Formation, Arithmetic
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Jones, Kip – Qualitative Report, 2004
The paper argues that the systematic review of qualitative research is best served by reliance upon qualitative methods themselves. A case is made for strengthening the narrative literature review and using narrative itself as a method of review. A technique is proposed that builds upon recent developments in qualitative systematic review by the…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Investigations, Ethnography, Methods
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Reyes, Fredy D.; Mozzachiodi, Riccardo; Baxter, Douglas A.; Byrne, John H. – Learning & Memory, 2005
In a recently developed in vitro analog of appetitive classical conditioning of feeding in "Aplysia," the unconditioned stimulus (US) was electrical stimulation of the esophageal nerve (En). This nerve is rich in dopamine (DA)-containing processes, which suggests that DA mediates reinforcement during appetitive conditioning. To test this…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Logical Thinking, Operant Conditioning, Classical Conditioning
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Arnaboldi, Michela; Azzone, Giovanni – International Journal of Educational Management, 2005
Purpose: The processual interpretation of strategic change has been often applied to private companies searching for a logic behind their apparent chaotic transformation. The purpose of this paper is to report on an experience in a public organisation, an Italian university, where this perspective is exceptionally reflected, entailing a refining…
Descriptors: Administrative Organization, Educational Change, Strategic Planning, Foreign Countries
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Leitao, Selma – Written Communication, 2003
This article investigates children's evaluation/selection of ideas in writing-related tasks. The critical dimension being considered was to what extent the communicative goal that defines argumentation establishes basic criteria with which children decide whether to include counterargument in a text. Data analysis focused on participants'…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Data Analysis, Rhetoric, Writing Assignments
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Laureano-Cruces, Ana Lilia; Ramirez-Rodriguez, Javier; de Arriaga, Fernando; Escarela-Perez, Rafael – Interactive Learning Environments, 2006
Intelligent learning systems (ILSs) have evolved in the last few years basically because of influences received from multi-agent architectures (MAs). Conflict resolution among agents has been a very important problem for multi-agent systems, with specific features in the case of ILSs. The literature shows that ILSs with cognitive or pedagogical…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Conflict Resolution, Cognitive Style
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Berci, Margaret E.; Griffith, Bryant – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2005
The purpose of this paper is two fold: first, to tease out the meaning inherent in the correlativity of the question and answer process and second, to suggest a philosophical answer to the question "What does it mean to question?" in the context of teacher education. To that end, we want to claim that R.G. Collingwood's "Logic of Question and…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Questioning Techniques, Logical Thinking, Social Studies
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