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Peer reviewedBailey, Dora L.; Vacca, Richard T. – Reading Horizons, 1986
Relates a preschool child's experiences with product labels to show how teachers can use such language stories to promote early reading and writing. (FL)
Descriptors: Child Language, Educational Theories, Language Acquisition, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedHupp, Susan C. – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1986
Effects of object training and photograph training on comprehension of category labels by 10 severely mentally retarded children and adolescents were explored. Results indicated that acquisition and transfer did not differ, yet generalization was significantly more accurate with objects than with photographs. Futhermore, generalization was…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Comprehension, Concept Formation
Peer reviewedFulwiler, Toby – Language Arts, 1985
Examines progressively more competent writing samples from a third grader's journal to illustrate the possibilities for using journals "across the curriculum." (HTH)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Content Area Writing, Grade 3, Individual Development
Peer reviewedBerthoff, Ann E. – College English, 1984
Assesses the hazards of models of cognitive development and the positivist views of language that support them. Considers how alternative views of language and learning can help develop a method of teaching that views reading and writing as interpretation and the making of meaning. (RBW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping, Communication Research, Comprehension
Beyer, Barry K. – Phi Delta Kappan, 1984
Educators can improve children's thinking skills through the following five steps: (1) identifying and defining the desirable thinking skills, (2) identifying the components of these skills, (3) providing systematic skills instruction, (4) integrating the teaching of thinking skills with various content areas, and (5) improving skills testing.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Core Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedReigeluth, Charles M. – Instructional Science, 1983
New knowledge is made meaningful by relating it to prior knowledge. Although meaningfulness usually relates new knowledge to prior superordinate knowledge, arbitrarily meaningful knowledge, coordinate, subordinate, and analogic ideas, experiential knowledge, and cognitive strategy also facilitate learning. Optimization of prior knowledge is done…
Descriptors: Cognitive Objectives, Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Epistemology
Peer reviewedNickerson, Raymond S. – Educational Leadership, 1984
The renewed interest in teaching thinking skills results from concern about the failings of the current system. Some thinking skills programs emphasize cognitive processes, while others are concerned with heuristics, development of formal operations, language and symbols, or thinking as subject matter. (TE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking
Peer reviewedMcDermott, R. P.; And Others – Teachers College Record, 1984
This article discusses how parents and teachers view the importance of homework. Study findings indicate that family environment influences successful homework completion. Homework procedures of two families were observed. In the successful situation, the family linked homework with family life, while the other family arranged special time that…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Environment, Elementary Education, Family Role
Peer reviewedDeshler, Donald D.; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1984
The first of two articles, featuring innovations and research on programs for learning disabled students in middle and high schools, reports expected goals and actual outcomes on intervention programs, identifies seven components for inclusion in a comprehensive intervention model, and focuses on the motivation, acquisition (of information), and…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education, Generalization, Individualized Education Programs
Peer reviewedHerzog, John D. – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1984
Argues that schools are alien to human juveniles'"normal" ways of learning. Sees return to more "normal ways" because of near 100 percent literacy in West (so children can "pick up" necessary skills), counterproductivity of current social segregation of the young, and rejection of docility as an appropriate educational goal. (CMG)
Descriptors: Child Development, Child Rearing, Educational Anthropology, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedShvell, Thomas J. – Intelligence, 1983
Two studies investigated whether instructing students to organize recall would differentially facilitate performance of "fast" and "slow" learners (defined from pretest recall performance). Instructions to employ alphabetic organization facilated performance of both groups to the same extent, whereas categorical organization facilitated slow…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Differences
Peer reviewedBayer, Ann Shea – Language Arts, 1984
Describes a teacher inservice project intended to develop a language policy for using writing as a learning tool. Argues that the inservice context for teachers as learners is similar to that of the classroom and that the opportunity for talking should likewise be used for learning in the classroom. (HTH)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Content Area Writing, Inservice Teacher Education, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedMcQueen, Richard – Educational Leadership, 1984
Herman Epstein's theory correlating children's learning capacity with periodic spurts and plateaus in brain growth is predicated on inadequate data and questionable interpretations thereof, and it is discredited by highly respected scholars, including those he cites. Applying this theory to classroom practice is therefore irresponsible and…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Development, Developmental Psychology, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedErickson, Kenneth A. – NASSP Bulletin, 1976
Because of expanded social responsibilities and the increasing "rights" of disruptive students, the effectiveness of schools is being sabotaged, believes the author. He suggests that the disruption of a classroom be considered a serious infringement on the rights of students who wish to be educated. (Editor)
Descriptors: Discipline Problems, Educational Environment, Educational Objectives, Educational Problems
Peer reviewedBlyth, W. A. L. – British Journal of Educational Studies, 1976
Indicates what the non-verbal elements in education are, some ways in which these new perspectives have been developed, and suggests some ways in which a coherent program of study, practice and research could be developed. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Classification, Diagrams, Educational Improvement, Educational Practices


