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Showing 17,011 to 17,025 of 25,898 results Save | Export
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Coster, Karin; Loots, Gerrit – International Journal of Art and Design Education, 2004
This article offers a theoretical framework of a meaningful art education for blind people. Existing literature focuses on the interaction between the artwork and the blind person. This text describes this aesthetic encounter which is complex due to tactile sensations, individual differences of the non-sighted viewer and specific features of the…
Descriptors: Art Education, Visual Impairments, Learning Modalities, Tactual Perception
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Henry, Michele L. – Journal of Research in Music Education, 2004
The purpose of this study was to determine the effectiveness of sight-singing instruction using specific pitch skills emphasizing scale degree and harmonic function. Fifteen pitch skills encompassing scalar, cadential, and chordal tasks were included in the study. Over a 12-week period, two randomly assigned groups of novice high school singers…
Descriptors: Pretests Posttests, Singing, Music Activities, Intonation
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Gallenstein, Nancy L. – Science and Children, 2005
When one thinks of a "concept map," they usually think of a chartlike graphic that describes a concept and its various relationships, with general concepts at the top, specific supporting concepts toward the bottom, and words and lines showing the connections and flow between the concepts. Some think of concept maps as tools for teachers of upper…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Science Instruction, Class Activities, Preschool Children
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Chiappe, Penny; Chiappe, Dan L.; Gottardo, Alexandra – Educational Psychology, 2004
This study examined the interaction between speech perception and sentential context among 13 poor readers and 49 good readers in grades one to three. Children's performance was examined on tasks assessing expressive and receptive vocabulary, reading skill, phonological awareness, pseudoword repetition, and phoneme identification. Good readers…
Descriptors: Semantics, Phonological Awareness, Phonemes, Identification
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Pozzer-Ardenghi, Lilian; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Science Education, 2005
In some contexts, a photograph may be worth a thousand words. Previous research revealed a dialectical character of photographs: they simultaneously lack determinacy and exhibit an excess of meaning. The purpose of this study was to understand how, under this condition, high school students interpret photographs that were accompanied by different…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Photography, High School Students, Foreign Countries
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Moseley, Bryan – Early Education and Development, 2005
This study argues that maximizing early childhood educators' abilities to create social opportunities for co-construction of knowledge rests on two understudied assumptions, one theoretical and one empirical. Theoretically this study rejects the notion of language as an impartial conveyor of knowledge in favor of one in which math and language…
Descriptors: Young Children, Subtraction, Mathematics Education, Mathematical Concepts
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Green, C. S.; Bavelier, D. – Cognition, 2006
Here, we demonstrate that action video game play enhances subjects' ability in two tasks thought to indicate the number of items that can be apprehended. Using an enumeration task, in which participants have to determine the number of quickly flashed squares, accuracy measures showed a near ceiling performance for low numerosities and a sharp drop…
Descriptors: Video Games, Computation, Short Term Memory, Performance
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Elks, Martin A. – Mental Retardation: A Journal of Practices, Policy and Perspectives, 2004
The eugenics era (c. 1900?1930) produced a strong desire among mental retardation professionals to recognize and control "the feeble-minded." Some eugenicists believed it was possible to classify individuals visually by learning to recognize what they believed to be observable characteristics of idiocy and imbecility. In this paper I used…
Descriptors: Classification, History, Mental Retardation, Mental Health Workers
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Pitt, Mark A.; Samuel, Arthur G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
Many models of spoken word recognition posit the existence of lexical and sublexical representations, with excitatory and inhibitory mechanisms used to affect the activation levels of such representations. Bottom-up evidence provides excitatory input, and inhibition from phonetically similar representations leads to lexical competition. In such a…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Verbal Stimuli, Word Recognition, Models
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Richardson, Daniel C.; Dale, Rick – Cognitive Science, 2005
We investigated the coupling between a speaker's and a listener's eye movements. Some participants talked extemporaneously about a television show whose cast members they were viewing on a screen in front of them. Later, other participants listened to these monologues while viewing the same screen. Eye movements were recorded for all speakers and…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Listening Comprehension Tests, Listening Comprehension, Cues
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Dunn, Camille C.; Tyler, Richard S.; Witt, Shelley A. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
The purpose of this investigation was to document performance of participants wearing a cochlear implant and hearing aid in opposite ears on speech-perception and localization tests. Twelve individuals who wore a cochlear implant and a hearing aid on contralateral ears were tested on their abilities to understand words in quiet and sentences in…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Auditory Perception, Sensory Aids, Auditory Evaluation
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Whitehill, Tara L.; Chau, Cynthia H.-F. – Clinical Linguistics and Phonetics, 2004
Many speakers with repaired cleft palate have reduced intelligibility, but there are limitations with current procedures for assessing intelligibility. The aim of this study was to construct a single-word intelligibility test for speakers with cleft palate. The test used a multiple-choice identification format, and was based on phonetic contrasts…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Congenital Impairments, Speech Tests, Articulation (Speech)
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Hick, Rachel; Botting, Nicola; Conti-Ramsden, Gina – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: The study is concerned with the cognitive abilities of children with specific language impairment (SLI). Previous research has indicated that children with SLI demonstrate difficulties with certain cognitive tasks despite normal non-verbal IQ scores. It has been suggested that a general processing limitation might account for the…
Descriptors: Visual Perception, Spatial Ability, Cognitive Ability, Age
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Huettig, F.; Altmann, G.T.M. – Cognition, 2005
When participants are presented simultaneously with spoken language and a visual display depicting objects to which that language refers, participants spontaneously fixate the visual referents of the words being heard [Cooper, R. M. (1974). The control of eye fixation by the meaning of spoken language: A new methodology for the real-time…
Descriptors: Semantics, Probability, Language Processing, Human Body
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Beck, Melissa R.; Angelone, Bonnie L.; Levin, Daniel T. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2004
The visual system continually selects some information for processing while bypassing the processing of other information, and as a consequence, participants often fail to notice large changes to visual stimuli. In the present studies, the authors investigated whether knowledge about the probability of particular changes occurring over time…
Descriptors: Knowledge Level, Prediction, Probability, Visual Stimuli
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