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Private Speech Assessment: A Medium for Studying the Cognitive Processes of Young Creative Children.
Peer reviewedDaugherty, Martha; Logan, Jenny – Early Child Development and Care, 1996
Examined relationships among young children's metacognitive processing and creative ability, based on information-processing theory and Vygotsky's early thought development theory. Twenty-one five- and six-year olds were assessed on four attributes of creativity, and their private speech was coded. Specific qualities and characteristics of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creativity, Gifted, Intellectual Development
Peer reviewedWilson, Barbara A. – Delta Pi Epsilon Journal, 1995
The Learning Environmental Preferences instrument was completed by 60 technical college instructors. A significant relationship was found between intellectual development and years of education; females scored higher than males. No relationship was found between intellectual development and age, teaching experience, or supervisory experience. (SK)
Descriptors: Age, College Faculty, Educational Attainment, Intellectual Development
Black, Susan – Executive Educator, 1995
Expeditionary Learning Outward Bound helps teachers guide students through learning expeditions, where they explore topics through their own questions and self-designed investigations. Although some programs involve overnight trips, not all expeditions are wilderness adventures. Regardless of setting, children should experience challenge and…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning, Individual Development, Intellectual Development
Jacobson, Robert L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1992
Robert J. Sternberg's research on cognitive style and model of "mental self-government" at all educational levels have led to a pilot elementary/secondary curriculum to help students develop common sense and practical judgment as well as intellect. The interinstitutional effort between Yale and Harvard universities includes Howard…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMagolda, Marcia B. Baxter – Journal of College Student Development, 1992
Conducted four-year longitudinal study of college students' intellectual development during college in which students reported the impact of their cocurricular experiences. Findings from 101 students revealed that students' peer relationships, organizational involvement, living arrangements, employment, and exchange experiences contributed to…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Intellectual Development, Longitudinal Studies
Peer reviewedGullette, Margaret Morganroth – Change, 1992
The importance of incorporating discussion into college lecture classes is discussed, problems in starting and expanding exchange of ideas are examined, and techniques for "raising the intellectual temperature" of a class are offered. Anecdotal examples are drawn from observations of teachers in a variety of discipline contexts. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
Peer reviewedPratt, Linda Ray – Academe, 1994
It is proposed that the postmodern university, with its emphasis on technology and its market orientation, departs from the true principals of liberal education, which is the development of intellect: the ability to think clearly and critically and to understand ourselves and others. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Role, Critical Thinking, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy
Peer reviewedSublett, Michael D. – Journal of Geography, 1991
Discusses the assignment of student logbooks in undergraduate geography classes. Observes that logbooks provide teachers with feedback from and greater knowledge of students. Asserts that logbook writing promotes better thinking by students, and allows them to learn about themselves and the course. Offers suggestions for teachers. (SG)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Geography Instruction, Higher Education, Intellectual Development
Basta, Samuel M.; Peterson, Robert F. – Child Abuse and Neglect: The International Journal, 1990
The study contrasted personality and intellectual characteristics of 3 groups of 16 children: a group molested by a teacher, a molested by a family member, and a nonmolested control group. There were few differences between the two molested groups or between boys and girls. Significant differences were found between molested and unmolested…
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Children, Intellectual Development, Intelligence Quotient
Peer reviewedDelattre, Edwin J. – NAMTA Journal, 1993
Recommends that inservice teacher education challenge the intellectual development of teachers. Discusses the learning process of teachers, and profiles activities in specific elementary and secondary schools intended to benefit students' learning. Suggests that teachers should teach sound habits of mind with intellectual humility, expertise in…
Descriptors: Humanities, Inservice Teacher Education, Intellectual Development, Secondary Education
Peer reviewedSizer, Theodore R. – Planning and Changing, 1991
Shadows student named Sam through classes at suburban high school. Typical high school is characterized by intellectual chaos created by string of utterly independent "subjects." There is virtually no federal-level talk about intellectual coherence for Sam. Curricular mandates (and accompanying assessment systems) place each traditional…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Environment, Federal Government, High Schools
Peer reviewedBednarz, Nadine; And Others – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 1993
Proposes a perspective on mathematical symbolism as a communication and conceptualization tool. Describes research in which first graders, solving mathematical problems in small groups, invented symbolic representations as both a part of the knowledge construction process and a means of communicating their conceptualizations to each other. (SV)
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Grade 1, Intellectual Development, Mathematics Education
Peer reviewedEgan, Kieran – Australian Journal of Education, 1991
Prevailing conceptions of young children's mental life represent children's thinking as confused and lacking western rationality. Instead, we should consider their mental life as a positive oral culture, and evolve a new science of early childhood education based on understanding of peoples in oral cultures. (MSE)
Descriptors: Child Development, Cultural Traits, Early Childhood Education, Educational Theories
Peer reviewedPark, Sun Hyung – Journal of Educational Administration, 1999
For two decades, Bates seriously challenged educational administration's value neutrality as ideological and concerned with protecting vested interests and class divisions in society. This article explores intellectual influences shaping Bates's critical-theory approach, examines similarities to Thomas Greenfield's ideas, and evaluates critics'…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education, Ideology
Burniske, R. W. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1999
Society's demand for specialization discourages teachers from becoming skilled generalists. The result is intellectual impoverishment for schools and children. The greatest challenge is teaching students to think in holistic terms. Students must look beyond telecomputing to explore ideas and discover how technology itself is shaping their…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Elementary Secondary Education, English Teachers, Humanism


