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Robutti, Ornella – International Journal for Technology in Mathematics Education, 2006
This report is part of a long-term research on the construction of mathematical meanings through the interaction with various technologies. The research involved a set of teaching experiments based on body motion with sensors and calculators at different school levels, from kindergarten to secondary school. Here I refer to the one developed in a…
Descriptors: Motion, Grade 8, Mathematical Concepts, Information Technology
Ross, Shannon; Treiman, Rebecca; Bick, Suzanne – Cognitive Development, 2004
To examine how young children learn to read new words, we asked preschoolers (N = 115, mean age 4 years, 8 months) to learn and remember novel spellings that made sense based on letter names (e.g. TZ for "tease") and spellings that were visually distinctive but phonetically inappropriate. Children who were more knowledgeable about letter names…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Spelling, Phonetics, Difficulty Level
Canobi, Katherine H. – Cognitive Development, 2004
Relations among patterns of conceptual and procedural knowledge and grade were examined in 90 six- to eight-year-olds in order to explore addition and subtraction development. Conceptual knowledge was assessed by examining children's responses to pairs of problems reflecting various part-whole relations. Children solved related problems as part of…
Descriptors: Individual Differences, Arithmetic, Mathematics Skills, Problem Solving
Nievar, M. Angela; Luster, Tom – Journal of Marriage and Family, 2006
In accordance with McLoyd's model of African American children's development, we examined the linkages among family income, maternal psychological distress, marital conflict, parenting, and children's outcomes in early and middle childhood, using a sample of 591 African American children from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth. Income…
Descriptors: African American Family, Models, Family Financial Resources, Family Income
Novak, Joseph D. – Research in Science Education, 2005
This paper describes the methods and outcomes of a 12-year longitudinal study into the effects of an early intervention program, while reflecting back on changes that have occurred in approaches to research, learning and instruction since the preliminary inception stages of the study in the mid 1960s. We began the study to challenge the prevailing…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Early Intervention, Concept Mapping, Science Education
Tardif, Twila; Wellman, Henry M.; Cheung, Kar Man – Journal of Child Language, 2004
The present study investigates the performance of 96 Cantonese-speaking three- to five-year-old preschoolers on three false belief tasks--a deceptive object, a change of location, and an unexpected contents task encompassing a variety of task factors. Most importantly, the research examines the possibility that false belief performance depends on…
Descriptors: Sino Tibetan Languages, Child Language, Preschool Children, Verbs
Prophet, R. B.; Vlaardingerbroek, B. – International Journal of Educational Development, 2003
This paper focuses on the "match" between Botswana secondary school students' Piagetian status and the cognitive demands of chemistry education. The chemistry syllabus studied by the most talented students engaged in the pure sciences at the senior secondary level is cognitively well within the reach of most. However, a serious mismatch…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Foreign Countries, Cognitive Development, Science Instruction
Gutierrez Romero, Mario Fernando – Electronic Journal of Research in Educational Psychology, 2004
Introduction: This research addresses preschoolers' intuitive understanding of rectilinear movement and some variables which affect it, and the type of arguments used when related knowledge states are justified. A first working hypothesis is that the resolution of practical, functional situations would be based on self-regulation processes. A…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Epistemology, Physics, Logical Thinking
Eidelman, Arthur I.; Feldman, Ruth – Zero to Three, 2006
The explosion in the rate of multiple births has led to new questions about how adequately prepared parents are for the demands of raising triplets and the implications for the healthy development of the infants. The authors examined the relationship between mothering, infant social behavior, and cognitive development in a longitudinal study of 23…
Descriptors: Mothers, Social Behavior, Infants, Interaction
Loizou, Eleni – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2005
This study investigates young children's humourous activity as a form of play and considers the implications on their cognitive development and learning. The study was conducted in an infant room of a university based group child care center and multiple qualitative data collection methods were used. The findings of this study suggest that during…
Descriptors: Creativity, Play, Young Children, Interpersonal Relationship
von Aufschnaiter, Claudia; von Aufschnaiter, Stefan – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2003
In the literature, learners' cognitive development is mainly discussed with respect to changes in learners' content-dependent knowledge (conceptual change or growth). Additional dimensions of time and complexity may also be taken into account to describe cognitive processes in at least three dimensions. We discuss these three dimensions of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Advanced Students, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures
Netten, Joan; Germain, Claude – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2004
This article describes the way in which the curriculum for intensive French was developed. Reference is made to its similarities to and differences from both the multidimensional curriculum proposed by the National Core French Study and the communicative approach. The importance of learning outcomes stated in terms of communicative outcomes…
Descriptors: Literacy, French, Cognitive Development, Intensive Language Courses
Karrass, Jan; Braungart-Rieker, Julia M. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2004
This longitudinal study examined the extent to which dimensions of infant negative temperament in the first year predicted IQ at age 3, and whether these associations depended on the quality of the infant-mother attachment relationship. In a sample of 63 infant-mother dyads, mothers completed Rothbart's (1981) IBQ when infants were 4 and 12…
Descriptors: Mothers, Intelligence Quotient, Infants, Attachment Behavior
Lemelin, Jean-Pascal; Tarabulsy, George M.; Provost, Marc A. – Merrill-Palmer Quarterly: Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2006
This longitudinal study investigated the relative contributions of infant temperament, maternal sensitivity, and psychosocial risk to individual differences in preschool children's cognitive development. It also examined specific moderating effects between predictors as well as the specific mediating role of maternal sensitivity in the relation…
Descriptors: Mothers, Preschool Children, Infants, Personality Traits
Brazelton, T. Berry; Greenspan, Stanley I. – Early Childhood Today, 2006
This article outlines six primary stages of a child's development. These basic functions show the way mental capacities work together as a team. Cognitive, motor, language, emotional, and social skills act together to help the child learn to deal with the world. Helping a child through these stages and fostering these core capacities requires a…
Descriptors: Young Children, Interpersonal Competence, Child Development, Developmental Stages

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