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Peer reviewedAllen, Eileen E. – Reference Librarian, 1995
Discusses ways to improve postsecondary library instruction based on theories of active learning. Topics include a historical background of active learning; student achievement and attitudes; cognitive development; risks; active teaching; and instructional techniques, including modified lectures, brainstorming, small group work, cooperative…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Active Learning, Brainstorming, Cognitive Development
Peer reviewedWellhousen, Karyn – Young Children, 1996
Supports expanding children's understanding of gender roles through children's literature. Describes the understanding of gender at different ages and developmental levels. Suggests the development of a classroom library collection that reflects a variety of gender roles and recommends titles for children of different age groups. Encourages…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childrens Literature, Cognitive Development, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Peer reviewedTharp, Roland; Yamauchi, Lois – Journal of Early Education and Family Review, 2000
Examines how the instructional conversation can be an effective method to raise the low academic achievement of various Native American students. Considers cultural differences in conversational styles, the relative emphasis on verbal or visual symbolic thinking in schools, student motivation, and the social organization of classrooms and schools.…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, American Indians, Change Strategies, Classroom Environment
Peer reviewedSmiley, Patricia A. – Social Development, 2001
Explored the relation between types of peer behavior in young children to children's level of intention understanding. Found level of intention understanding predicted types of overtures made, types of objects offered, monitoring of partner responses, partner compliance, and types of speech acts addressed to partners. (Author/DLH)
Descriptors: Child Language, Cognitive Development, Context Effect, Inquiry
Peer reviewedWolf, Aline D. – Montessori Life, 2001
Presents ways adults in Montessori 6-to-9 classrooms can help students expand their vocabularies. Suggestions for building vocabulary and understanding include using Command Cards to teach a variety of verbs, providing opportunities to play with words and memorize poetry, and making classical literature available. Maintains that lack of concern…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Development, Educational Practices, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedHauser-Cram, Penny – Young Children, 1998
Reviews theory and research on mastery motivation in young children. Discusses Piaget's and White's perspectives on motivation, changes in mastery motivation during early childhood, how motivation relates to cognition, how caregivers influence mastery motivation, motivation in children with disabilities, assessment of mastery motivation, and how…
Descriptors: Caregiver Child Relationship, Cognitive Development, Disabilities, Early Childhood Education
Peer reviewedEckstein, Shulamith Graus – Developmental Review, 2000
Extends dynamic model of cognitive growth proposed by van Geert in three directions: (1) added a term to consider exposure to material to be learned; (2) developed method to apply model to cross-sectional studies; and (3) developed procedure to scale cognitive abilities tests with items of varying difficulty. Tests model with 2- to 15-year-olds'…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development
Lyon, G. Reid; Fletcher, Jack M. – Education Matters, 2001
Despite public skepticism regarding steadily increasing numbers of learning-disabled students, most experts agree that 5 percent of schoolchildren suffer severe difficulties with language and other skills. There are three explanations: remediation is ineffective after second grade; identification comes too late; and federal policies overlook…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Intervention, Educational Policy, Elementary Secondary Education
Wood, Terry; Williams, Gaye; McNeal, Betsy – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2006
The relationship between normative patterns of social interaction and children's mathematical thinking was investigated in 5 classes (4 reform and 1 conventional) of 7- to 8-year-olds. In earlier studies, lessons from these classes had been analyzed for the nature of interaction broadly defined; the results indicated the existence of 4 types of…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Mathematics Skills, Mathematical Logic
Brown, Dave F. – Theory Into Practice, 2003
Gaining students' cooperation in urban classrooms involves establishing an environment where teachers address students' cultural and ethnic needs, as well as their social, emotional, and cognitive needs. This article describes the management strategies of 13 1st- through 12th-grade urban teachers from seven cities throughout the United States.…
Descriptors: Urban Teaching, Assertiveness, Urban Schools, Culturally Relevant Education
Winneke, Gerhard; Walkowiak, Jens; Kramer, Ursula – Psychology in the Schools, 2004
This paper comments on a critical review of cohort studies on PCB-related neurodevelopmental deficit in young children by D.V. Cicchetti, A.S. Kaufman, and S.S. Sparrow (CKS). Major points of criticism of CKS, namely alleged violation of statistical principles, presumed lack of clinical significance of findings, and alleged insufficient control of…
Descriptors: Epidemiology, Criticism, Statistical Inference, Validity
Levin, Tamar; Wadmany, Rivka – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2006
This study explores the views on learning, technology and classroom practices of both students and teachers in a technology-enriched classroom environment. It examined the characteristics and uniqueness of 4th-6th grade students' views and the changes in their teachers' views as result of longitudinal experiences of an innovative approach to…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Constructivism (Learning), Cognitive Development, Student Attitudes
Peetsma, Thea; van der Veen, Ineke; Koopman, Pjotr; van Schooten, Erik – School Effectiveness and School Improvement, 2006
The proportion of low-achieving children in a class can affect the progress of individual pupils in that class. Having a large proportion of low achievers in a class could slow down growth in cognitive achievement but, might also boost such growth, due to the effects of specialist teaching geared to low achievers' needs. In a longitudinal study of…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Low Achievement, Cognitive Development, Longitudinal Studies
Schmitz, Mark F. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2006
The study presented here examines the influence of social and family contexts on the self-esteem of Mexican (n = 287), Mexican American (n = 558), and Puerto Rican (n = 212) children. Using data from the National Longitudinal Surveys of Youth, tests of a longitudinal path model show significant social and family effects on the cognitive…
Descriptors: Mexicans, Puerto Ricans, Mexican Americans, Family Structure
Repacholi, Betty; Trapolini, Tania – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
There is growing evidence that insecurely attached children are less advanced in their social understanding than their secure counterparts. However, attachment may also predict how individual children use their social understanding across different relationships. For instance, the insecure child's social-cognitive difficulties may be more…
Descriptors: Social Development, Preschool Children, Attachment Behavior, Verbal Ability

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