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Showing 61 to 75 of 145 results Save | Export
Rockler, Michael J. – 1986
Studies of the brain and of the human culture can be used to demonstrate the limits of traditional approaches (based on psychological perspectives which are often narrow and restrictive) to learning styles and to offer additional perspectives on the complexity of learning. The study of the hemispheres of the brain and its triune nature indicates…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cognitive Style, Educational Anthropology, Epistemology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Fudin, Robert; Lembessis, Elizabeth – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1982
Apparent ambiguities in Levy and Reid's writing posture criteria and dissimilar criteria used by other investigators are discussed. This review suggests that an adequate test of hypothesized relations among handedness, hand posture during writing, sex, and cerebral organization requires development of a standard set of valid criteria for writing…
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Handwriting Skills, Lateral Dominance, Literature Reviews
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Restak, Richard M. – Young Children, 1979
Uses evidence from recent brain research to prove that many behavioral differences between men and women are based on biologically inherent differences in brain functioning. (CM)
Descriptors: Behavioral Science Research, Children, Females, Infants
Whitmore, Paul G. – 1986
The usefulness of"memory" is being questioned as a concept for explaining the facts of remembering. The brain is an extensive and elaborate switching system for organizing sensory inputs from environmental situations and for generating appropriate and properly timed responses to them. The learning of knowledge consists of learning a…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Brain, Educational Development, Instructional Development
McWhinnie, Harold J. – 1997
This paper presents a collection of thoughts and observations about a grand theory of creativity in the arts. The theory elaborated in the paper is based upon the following five major bodies of psychological knowledge and research: (1) hemisphere differences and cerebral lateralization; (2) chemical balance in the brain and bipolar factors; (3)…
Descriptors: Art Education, Creative Art, Creativity, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Shwartz, Deborah – Children Today, 1981
Describes a support group for parents of premature infants and an intensive care unit for these infants. The unit has been established to meet high-risk infants' developmental needs by, for instance, promoting attachment behavior, interpreting physiological cues, and teaching parents to understand their infants' needs. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Attachment Behavior, Hospitalized Children, Medical Services, Neurological Organization
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Levinson, Boris M.; Martindale, Colin – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1980
Martindale's assumption that Jews, Catholics, and Protestants are each homogeneous populations is criticized. His assumption that similar psychometric patterns found in brain-damaged and non-brain-damaged populations reflect similar brain organization is disputed. Martindale replies to this criticism. (Author/BEF)
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Group Unity, Intelligence Tests, Jews
Sylwester, Robert – DesignShare (NJ1), 2007
The author notes that teachers who continually require students to sit still and stop talking apparently prefer to teach a grove of trees rather than a classroom full of students. School environments should be designed to enhance the development of student brains -- and student brains are about movement, not motionless stagnation. 21st century…
Descriptors: Student Development, Educational Environment, Educational Philosophy, Brain
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Demetrikopoulos, Melissa K.; Pecore, John; Rose, Jordan D.; Fobbs, Archibald J., Jr.; Johnson, John I.; Carruth, Laura L. – Science Scope, 2006
The brain is a truly fascinating structure! It controls the body and allows everyone to think, learn, speak, move, feel, remember, and experience emotions. Although the brain is a single organ, it is very complex and has several regions, each having a specific function. These functionally diverse regions work together to allow for coordination of…
Descriptors: Neurological Organization, Science Curriculum, Brain, Body Composition
Brand, Alice G. – 1996
Suggesting that neuroscience and the actualities of brain circuitry can provide guidance for what is misunderstood in writing education, namely, the role of subjectivity and values in the composing process, this paper argues that neuroscience provides corporeal evidence for the salience of particular brain structures and processes responsible for…
Descriptors: Brain, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Models
Goldstein, Laurence; Harris, Roy – Hongkong Papers in Linguistics and Language teaching, 1990
In a statement-response-reply format, a proposition concerning the study of semantics is made and debated in three papers by two authors. In the first paper, it is proposed that semantics is not the study of the concept of meaning, but rather a neurolinguistic issue, despite the fact that semantics is linked to context. It is argued that semantic…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Definitions, Language Research, Linguistic Theory
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Fischer, Kurt W. – Child Development, 1987
The developmental pattern of concurrent synaptogenesis in rhesus monkeys is consistent with a straightforward model of relations between brain and cognitive development. Concurrent synaptogenesis is hypothesized to lay the primary cortical foundation for a series of developmental levels in middle infancy that have been empirically documented in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Infants, Literature Reviews, Models
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Hynd, George W.; Hynd, Cynthia R. – Reading Research Quarterly, 1984
Reviews attempts to adequately define dyslexia with a focus on recent efforts at developing a nosology of dyslexia and discusses the neurological basis of reading and severe reading failure with an emphasis on validating evidence provided through brain-mapping procedures and postmortem studies. (HOD)
Descriptors: Anatomy, Dyslexia, Learning Disabilities, Models
Hart, Leslie – School Administrator, 1983
Using a question-and-answer format, the author discusses brain research, its relationship to existing learning theory, left- and right-brain differences and their relationship to logical thinking, brain growth spurts, learning styles, and the effects of future brain knowledge on learning, especially on schools' development of brain-compatible…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kinsbourne, Marcel – American Psychologist, 1982
Connectionistic notions of hemispheric specialization and use are incompatible with the network organization of the human brain. Although brain organization has correspondence with phenomena at more complex levels of analysis, the correspondence is not categorical in nature, as has been claimed by the left-brain/right-brain theorists. (Author/GC)
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Behavior Theories, Cerebral Dominance, Cognitive Processes
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