NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing 19,441 to 19,455 of 33,146 results Save | Export
PEI, MARJORIE LOWRY – 1967
FOR SUCCESSFUL CURRICULUM REVISION REGARDING THE DEVELOPMENT OF READING SKILLS IN THE FOREIGN LANGUAGE PROGRAM, THERE MUST BE CONTINUOUS EVALUATION OF EXISTING THEORIES AS WELL AS INVESTIGATION OF NEW ONES. AREAS WHICH HAVE ALREADY BEEN EVALUATED FOR THEIR USEFULNESS IN THE TEACHING OF READING IN A FOREIGN LANGUAGE ARE READABILITY FORMULAS, DIRECT…
Descriptors: Language Research, Learning Processes, Modern Languages, Readability
DI VESTA, FRANCIS J. – 1966
ONE HUNDRED CHILDREN IN EACH OF THE GRADES 2 THROUGH 6 WERE INCLUDED IN THIS STUDY OF THE DEVELOPMENT OF MEANING IN CHILDREN. BASED ON STUDIES WITH ADULTS BY OSGOOD ET AL, THIS RESEARCH EXAMINED THE HYPOTHESIS THAT THE "EVALUATIVE" SYSTEM OF AFFECTIVE MEANING DEVELOPS FIRST, FOLLOWED BY INCREASED USE OF THE "POTENCY" AND…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students, Learning Processes
BELLACK, ARNO A.; AND OTHERS – 1963
A METHODOLOGY WAS DEVELOPED TO DESCRIBE THE LANGUAGE OF THE CLASSROOM BY CONSIDERING--(1) PEDAGOGICAL MOVES OF STRUCTURING, SOLICITING, RESPONDING, AND REACTING, (2) SUBSTANTIVE MEANINGS, (3) SUBSTANTIVE-LOGICAL MEANINGS, (4) INSTRUCTIONAL MEANINGS, AND (5) INSTRUCTIONAL-LOGICAL MEANINGS. A PROCEDURE WAS ALSO DEVELOPED FOR CHARACTERIZING THE…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Language Patterns, Language Research, Learning
KUBZANSKY, PHILIP E.; REBELSKY, FREDA G. – 1965
THE PROBLEM OF THE RESEARCH WAS TO STUDY THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN PERCEPTION AND COGNITION FACTORS IN THE GROWING CHILD. A CENTRAL TASK WAS TO DEVELOP AN INSTRUMENT FOR ASSESSING THE DEVELOPMENT OF SIZE CONSTANCY IN A PROCEDURE IN WHICH THE EFFECTS OF COGNITIVE ACTIVITY COULD BE EITHER CONTROLLED OR EVALUATED. USING A NUMBER OF CONSIDERATIONS, THE…
Descriptors: Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Learning Processes
Van Kleeck, Anne; Hopper, Robert – 1980
The purpose of this analytical essay is to lay out some conceptual boundaries and distinctions about how children develop and use metacommunication (messages whose primary function is to make reference to or transform themselves or other messages). Two types of metacommunication are discussed: metalinguistic messages, in which there is a temporary…
Descriptors: Child Development, Communication Research, Communication Skills, Language Processing
Lamberski, Richard J. – 1980
Intended to serve as a primer for future investigators, this paper surveys and analyzes research studies published between 1945 and 1980 which focus on the effect(s) of color on human cognitive learning. The question of whether or not color as a variable in the design of instructional materials enhances learning has been approached by researchers…
Descriptors: Color, Instructional Materials, Learning, Learning Processes
Johnson, James E. – 1977
The purpose of this study was to ascertain (1) whether young children are able to recognize a need to check response accuracy and memory verification and (2) what strategies they use. A model of the nursery room was used to assess 37 preschoolers' recognition, recall, and spatial memory for school objects. Children were asked to verify their…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Processes, Memory, Models
KLAUSMEIER, HERBERT J.; AND OTHERS – 1968
THE NATURE OF A CONCEPT WAS EXPLICATED IN TERMS OF FOUR CHARACTERISTICS--DEFINABILITY, STRUCTURE, PSYCHOLOGICAL MEANINGFULNESS AND UTILITY. A CONCEPT LEARNING STRATEGY WAS SEEN TO BE COMPRISED OF THREE SETS OF COGNITIVE PROCESSES--(1) ANALYZING SITUATION, (2) SECURING INFORMATION, AND (3) PROCESSING INFORMATION. A SERIES OF 19 CONTROLLED…
Descriptors: Ability, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation
Cohen, Arthur M. – Junior College Research Review, 1969
Although there are many reports on the introduction of replicable media in junior college instruction, there is a lack of coordinated research on any particular form of instruction. This is a serious matter, for, without date on whether or not anyone has learned anything from one medium, the introduction of any other medium is necessarily based on…
Descriptors: Educational Media, Institutional Research, Instructional Innovation, Learning Processes
Bogartz, Richard S. – 1965
This paper is concerned with memory functions in sequentially structured behavior. Twenty-five 4- and 5-year-old preschool children participated in a prediction experiment in which a stack of cards (each card alternately having a patch of red or green tape on it) was displayed to the child. The child was presented with a card and asked to predict…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Mathematical Models, Memory, Prediction
Kleinman, Matthew – 1978
Transfer of learning in the acquisition of motor skills, centered around proactive and retroactive experimental designs, is discussed. The structures of the two designs are explained and compared. The effect upon transfer of learning by both stimulus and response gradients is examined. Phenomena contributing to negative transfer are investigated,…
Descriptors: Conceptual Schemes, Learning Processes, Models, Perceptual Motor Learning
Ryan, Michael P. – 1976
An hypothesis concerning a definition of the concepts assimilation and accommodation was tested. Both assimilation and accommodation were hypothesized to be processes that produce changes in cognitive structures--internal representations used to organize behavior. The hypothesis is that, in contrast to assimilation, the changes in structure caused…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Gregg, Lee W.; Farnham-Diggory, S. – 1975
A cognition theory of learning is described based on information processing analyses of representations of knowledge in long term, intermediate term, and short term memory. An application of the theory is presented for an example of algebra. It is emphasized that learning is not simply a stamping in, through repetition, of simple links. The…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Learning Processes, Learning Theories, Memory
Tzeng, Ovid J. L. – 1974
Sixty subjects learned four different 16-word lists in four different conditions. Within each list, every word was repeated. The four conditions were defined by a 2 (whole vs. blocked presentation) by 2 (same order vs. random order repetition) factorial design. An unexpected final free recall followed the immediate free recall of the fourth list.…
Descriptors: High School Students, Learning Processes, Learning Theories, Memory
Cooley, William W.; Leinhardt, Gaea – 1975
This paper describes a model of classroom processes that can be used in research on the nature of the relationship between school practices and student achievement. It is stated that the model specifies that criterion performance is a function of initial abilities and of the following four constructs: (1) opportunity, (2) motivators, (3)…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Classroom Research, Learning Processes, Models
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  1293  |  1294  |  1295  |  1296  |  1297  |  1298  |  1299  |  1300  |  1301  |  ...  |  2210