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Sobel, Kiley – Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop, 2019
What do we know about immersive media--virtual, augmented, mixed, and cross realities (VR, AR, MR, and XR)--and young children? So far, designers, developers, and media producers have been focusing on creating hardware, software, and content for and conducting studies with adolescents and adults--but children find these technologies incredibly…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Simulated Environment, Young Children, Child Development
Soholt, Polli – NAMTA Journal, 2015
Polli Soholt points to normalization in the first plane as leading to the successful realization of the human personality, which is the basis of social development. Children who have cultivated concentration and purposeful work at an early age develop the virtues to become world citizens. Normalization can be assisted by certain practices: 1)…
Descriptors: Child Development, Social Attitudes, Social Development, Citizenship Education
Tate, Carol Satterfield; Warren, Amye R. – 1989
This study examined the extent to which children are willing to be coached into giving false descriptions of events and children's ability to provide such coached descriptions. Participants were 37 children from 3 years and 7 months to 7 years and 1 month of age. When children were urged to trick a "friend" of the experimenter, 1 child…
Descriptors: Adults, Credibility, Individual Characteristics, Lying
Treiman, Rebecca – 1982
Stop consonants after initial /s/ are standardly spelled as the unvoiced stops /p/, /t/, and /k/. Phonetically, however, they are similar to the voiced stops /b/, /d/, and /g/. Research suggests that many young children make consistent, reasonable, but unconventional, judgments about sounds and English spelling. This paper considers the case of…
Descriptors: Adults, Consonants, Language Research, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
Cotten-Huston, Annie L.; Lunney, G. Sparks – 1983
The present study compares the attributions of young children 5 to 6.5 years of age with those of adult subjects 20 to 30 years of age, who were engaged in the same competitive situation. It was hypothesized that sex differences would occur in the sample of adults but not in the sample of children. Believing outcomes to be determined by either…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Attribution Theory, Comparative Analysis
Medlin, Richard – 1980
This study investigates different methods of increasing children's use of active rehearsal in recall, and the extent to which this active rehearsal improves their recall. Seven groups of second grade children and one group of adults were asked to memorize a list of everyday words in four study-test trials. Two of the groups of children were given…
Descriptors: Adults, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Influences
Wiseman, Ann Sayre – 1986
This slide talk offers advice to adults to help children cope with nightmares. Children are encouraged (1) to assume power over the dream by drawing it; (2) separate the frightened part of the self from the problem-solving self; (3) let the picture describe the problem; (4) ask the picture to speak; (5) see how the dreamer's power matches the…
Descriptors: Adults, Catharsis, Emotional Experience, Freehand Drawing
Donaldson, Morag Lennox – 1984
Questions and sentence completion tasks were used to investigate the ability of twenty-four 5-year-old and an equal number of 8-year-old children to explain actions in terms of intentions. When the children were given information about an action and a result, they were able to infer that the reason for the action was the agent's intention to…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Ability, Foreign Countries
Halford, Graeme S.; And Others – 1987
A series of experiments, which used the primary memory paradigm of Wickens et al. (1981, 1985) with university students, adults, and 8- and 9-year-old children, found an increase in primary memory capacity with age. Primary memory differs from secondary memory in that the latter is susceptible to proactive interference, whereas the former is not.…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes
Trabasso, Tom; Riley, Christine A. – 1973
This discussion of transitive inferences (if A greater than B & B greater than C, then A greater thean C) emphasizes an information processing analysis of logical thought. The two basic factors considered in such an analysis are (1) the task environment, including its structure, demands, decisions required, and information given; and (2) the…
Descriptors: Adults, Behavioral Science Research, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Dukette, Dianne; Stiles, Joan – 1991
Previous literature on children's visual pattern perception has suggested that preschool children may process hierarchical forms in a manner different from that of older children and adults. Data from some studies suggested that children are holistic processors of pattern information, while other studies characterized children as piecemeal…
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Developmental Stages, Early Childhood Education
Chien, Yu-Chin; Wexler, Kenneth – 1987
Three experiments investigated the development in young children of two concepts: the antecedent possibilities for reflexives (e.g., himself or herself) and pronouns (e.g., him or her). In the first experiment, 156 English-speaking children aged 2;6 to 6;6 and 21 adults were tested for their understanding of antecedents within reflexive sentences,…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
Prescott, Barbara L. – 1987
A study identified discourse patterns in potential disputes, deflected disputes, incomplete, and completed disputes from a one-hour conversation involving two 3-year-old female children and one female adult. These varied dispute episodes were identified, coded, and analyzed using a pragmatic model of adult argumentation focusing on the structures,…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Conflict Resolution, Discourse Analysis
Templeton, Shane; Sulzby, Elizabeth – 1980
In its broadest sense, metalinguistic awareness refers to the study of or reflection upon language as an object--the form and structure of language rather than the content, the way in which the form expresses or relates to the message. One value of research on metalinguistic awareness lies in its potential for testing adult notions about the ways…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Language, Language Acquisition, Language Enrichment
Lo, Deborah Eville – 2000
This study explored the relative strength of relationships between text, child, adult reader, and mode of story reading style in contributing to comprehension and memory in young children. Specifically, the study asked: What is the correlational relationship between the four vertices of a tetrahedral model of understanding and memory in children's…
Descriptors: Adults, Comparative Analysis, Models, Reader Text Relationship
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