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Peer reviewedPlatten, Linda – International Journal of Early Years Education, 1995
Investigated seven-year-old children's understanding of certain geographical terms. Found that children this age have considerable difficulty with some concepts and that even vernacular terms are often misunderstood. Results support the idea of children's alternative conceptions and suggest that, for teaching to be more effective, children's prior…
Descriptors: Comprehension, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedAlexander, Patricia A.; Parsons, James L. – Contemporary Education, 1991
Misconceptions about educational testing and school assessment are ingrained in U.S. society and in the knowledge structure of educational professionals. Tests and assessments are highly ethnocentric, ignoring knowledge valued by many cultures. The article examines misconceptions and makes recommendations for an informed discourse on using testing…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Tests, Change Strategies, Cultural Influences
Peer reviewedGerver, Mikhail – Quantum, 1992
Challenges the readers comprehension of mathematical induction by presenting four examples of arguments that misrepresent the concept. Discusses the reasons why the arguments lead to false conclusions. (MDH)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Enrichment Activities
Peer reviewedGraeber, Anna O.; Tirosh, Dina – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 1990
Described are the conceptions held by United States and Israeli students about multiplication and division that may impede their work with decimals. Included are the introduction, method, division and multiplication task results, and the implications for education and textbook development. (KR)
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedLarochelle, Marie; Desautels, Jacques – International Journal of Science Education, 1991
Identifies the unsophisticated assumptions and conjectures, both intuitive and empirical in character, underlying secondary school science students' (n=25) portrayal of scientific knowledge and its production. Structured interview protocols explored not only the students' substantive knowledge base but, perhaps more important, their ability to…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Foreign Countries, Interviews
Peer reviewedGraeber, Anna O.; Baker, Kay M. – Arithmetic Teacher, 1992
Presents teaching methods to rectify the tendency of students and even teachers to divide the smaller number into the larger in problem situations requiring division, while recognizing the impossibility of the answer in the situation. (MDH)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Division
Understandings and Misunderstandings of Eight Graders of Five Chemistry Concepts Found in Textbooks.
Peer reviewedAbraham, Michael R.; And Others – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1992
Reports on misconceptions held by intermediate grade students concerning chemistry textbook concepts, on the relation of reasoning ability to those misconceptions, and on the extent that textbooks encourage misconceptions. Concludes that the level of understanding displayed for the selected concepts, in combination with the nature of students'…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Measurement
Peer reviewedBanerjee, Anil C.; Power, Colin N. – International Journal of Science Education, 1991
Three modules on chemical equilibrium, developed as resource materials for a content-methodology course in chemistry for intending teachers and also for general chemistry courses at the senior secondary and tertiary levels, are described. The use of these modules in a methodology course showed a significant development of competence in the…
Descriptors: Chemical Equilibrium, Cognitive Development, Course Content, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedLevin, Iris; Druyan, Sara – Child Development, 1993
Three groups of sixth, eighth, and tenth graders took pre- and posttests on a Piagetian problem and a problem that evoked a misconception. Two intervention groups engaged in group transactions intended to create inter- and intrapersonal conflicts or took a multiple-choice test. Results indicated that treatment groups progressed on the Piagetian…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Cognitive Development, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education
Barber, Benjamin R. – Harper's, 1993
The education crisis is like TV violence; the worse it gets, the more inert we become. Truth is that Americans do not really care about education. The young are adept at "reading" adult hypocrisy. Commercialism rules. There is nothing in Homer, Virginia Woolf, Shakespeare, or teaching that will bring youngsters big bucks. Freedom and…
Descriptors: Advertising, Citizenship Responsibility, Civil Liberties, Comparative Education
Peer reviewedJohnson, Catherine B.; And Others – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 1991
Male undergraduates (n=165) at Kansas State University (Manhattan) were more likely than female undergraduates (n=187) to misperceive behavior of a videotaped professor interacting with a cross-sex student. Results suggest that men view interpersonal interactions in more sexual terms than do women, a finding with implications for study of sexual…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Cues, Females, Higher Education
Peer reviewedLehrer, Richard; Littlefield, Joan – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Whether software-based mediated instruction reduces the incidence of misconceptions and errors by children learning the LOGO computer language was studied with 24 fourth and 46 second graders. Mediated instruction reduced errors and misconceptions compared to those detected in prior studies. The roles of working memory and true misunderstandings…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Science Education, Computer Software, Educational Practices
Peer reviewedDunn, Andrew – Educational Leadership, 1993
National testing will not improve teacher's genius, students' prospects in life, or learning opportunities in school's immediate surroundings. Too much emphasis will be placed on comparisons among districts, counties, and states. Money will be pumped into raising scores, not decreasing class size or giving teachers more time to work with children.…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Class Size, Comparative Education, Educational Opportunities
Peer reviewedOsborne, Jonathan – School Science Review, 1991
Provided is a perspective on the teaching of a unit on the Earth in space. The themes to be found within the unit, approaches and resources that can be used for teaching and learning the subject, and some of the typical ideas that children hold about astronomical subjects are provided. (KR)
Descriptors: Astronomy, British National Curriculum, Elementary Education, Elementary School Science
Peer reviewedJones, D. G. C. – Physics Education, 1991
Discussed is how modern physics is usually approached via the photoelectric effect and how this can lead to a physically wrong picture of light. The importance of using the quantum theory developed after 1920 to explain the properties of light is discussed. (KR)
Descriptors: College Science, Course Content, Higher Education, Light


