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Eyler, Janet S. – Michigan Journal of Community Service Learning, 2000
Research emphasizes the impact of service learning on college students' development. Less evidence exists of its cognitive impact. To improve academic learning quality, researchers must identify intellectual outcomes best facilitated through service learning, create measures of these outcomes to embed into instructional processes, and conduct…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Community Services, Educational Research, Higher Education
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Edelstein, Wolfgang; Schroeder, Eberhard – Child Development, 2000
Focuses on the conceptual implications of analyses of individual differences in francophone post-Piagetian research. Maintains that these analyses are preoccupied by the "American question" of measurement and method, instead of attempting a theoretical account of the issues raised by intraindividual and interindividual variability in…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Individual Development
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Bruer, John T. – Educational Researcher, 1997
Examines results and interpretations from recent books, journal articles, policy studies, and media stories on how the emerging understanding of brain development and neural function could revolutionize educational practice, focusing on: the neuroscience and education argument; synaptogenesis; critical developmental periods; enriched environments…
Descriptors: Brain, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology
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Matan, Adee; Carey, Susan – Cognition, 2001
Three experiments examined the relative importance of original function and current function in artifact categorization for young children and adults. It was concluded that 6-year-olds have begun to organize their understanding of artifacts around the notion of original function, whereas 4-year-olds have not. Data were examined in terms of how…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Children, Classification
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Bloom, Paul; Markson, Lori – Cognition, 2001
Notes young children's fast mapping ability for word and fact learning. Finds children's extension of a new word to novel objects from same category but lack of extension for new facts, as replicated by Waxman and Booth, unsurprising. Poses more interesting question: is word learning done solely through more general cognitive systems or through…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Generalization, Learning Processes
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Heyman, Gail D.; Gelman, Susan A. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2000
Four studies examined the tendency of preschoolers to use verbal labels versus appearance information in making novel inductive inferences. Results revealed that preschoolers tended to use trait labels of "shy" or "outgoing" rather than superficial resemblance in making psychological inferences. These results could not be attributed to biases on…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Induction, Inferences
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Zhang, Zhicheng; RiCharde, R. Stephen – Journal of College Student Development, 1999
Examines intellectual and metacognitive development of 300 male college students in a longitudinal design. Although the change in Dualism and Relativism confirmed previous research, Commitment, Empathy, and metacognitive measures followed a V-shaped discontinuous path. Intellectual and metacognitive development was found to vary with academic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, College Students, Higher Education, Intellectual Development
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Marcus, Gary F. – Cognition, 1998
Demonstrates that connectionist models described in "Rethinking Innateness" (Elman, et al., 1996) depend on innately assumed representations and do not offer a genuine alternative to nativism. Presents simulation results showing that the models are incapable of deriving genuine abstract representations that are not presupposed. Maintains…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Learning Processes, Learning Theories
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Padilla, Yolanda C.; Boardman, Jason D.; Hummer, Robert A.; Espitia, Marilyn – Social Forces, 2002
Children of Mexican American women, especially immigrants, have unexpectedly good birth weights. A study of 3,710 Mexican American, Black, and White children aged 3-4, who completed the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-Revised, found birth weight was not a powerful predictor of child cognitive development, nor did it explain pronounced racial and…
Descriptors: Birth Weight, Blacks, Child Development, Cognitive Development
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Mainemelis, Charalampos; Boyatzis, Richard E.; Kolb, David A. – Management Learning, 2002
Uses three instruments derived from experiential learning theory--the Learning Style Inventory, the Adaptive Style Inventory, and the Learning Skills Profile--to test hypotheses about the differences between balanced and specialized learning styles in a sample of 198 part-time and full-time MBA students. (Contains 81 references.) (Author/YDS)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Style, Experiential Learning, Graduate Study
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Cole, Bradley G. – Journal of Correctional Education, 2002
Review of reports on correctional rehabilitation programs for youth found that cognitive, social, and interpersonal skills training was effective in assisting adolescents with transition to adulthood. The right classroom environment could be the setting for interventions that help them reentry society. (SK)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Classroom Environment, Cognitive Development, Correctional Education
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Lillard, Angeline – Developmental Review, 2001
Presents the Twin Earth model, proposing specific relations between pretend play and understanding minds, from ontogenesis of pretense to later emergence of role play and representational understandings of pretense. Central to the model is supposition that pretend play functions for children much as Twin Earth functions for philosophers, by…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Literature Reviews, Models
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Liu, Jing; Golinkoff, Roberta Michnick; Sak, Kimberly – Child Development, 2001
Six match-to-sample picture/object selection experiments explored 3- to 5-year-olds' knowledge about superordinate words and acquisition of this knowledge. Findings indicated that number of standards (one versus two), types of standards (different versus same basic-level categories), and nature of representation (pictures versus objects)…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cues
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Smith, Leslie – Developmental Review, 1998
Discusses objective knowledge and reality; objective experience and objectivity; objectivity without representation; and problems with constructivism. Argues that at issue with Muller, Sokol, and Overton's model is dispensability of the representation concept in an account of knowledge development during infancy. Concludes that a constructivist…
Descriptors: Child Development, Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Infants
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Geary, David C.; Bjorklund, David F. – Child Development, 2000
Describes evolutionary developmental psychology as the study of the genetic and ecological mechanisms that govern the development of social and cognitive competencies common to all human beings and the epigenetic (gene-environment interactions) processes that adapt these competencies to local conditions. Outlines basic assumptions and domains of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Competence, Developmental Psychology, Evolution
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