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Russo, James; Hopkins, Sarah – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2018
Measuring computational fluency, an aspect of procedural fluency, is complex. Many attempts to measure this construct have emphasised accuracy and efficiency at the expense of flexibility and appropriate strategy choice. Efforts to account for these latter constructs through assessing children's computational reasoning using structured interviews…
Descriptors: Mental Computation, Thinking Skills, Mathematics Skills, Addition
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Gash, Hugh – 1980
The mediational linkage between class inclusion and role-taking skills was investigated by studying the effects of a successive perspective-taking training technique on the consolidation of class inclusion structures. Sixty preoperational Irish boys were given two pretest measures of class inclusion and two of role-taking. They were then grouped…
Descriptors: Children, Egocentrism, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Moran, James D., III – 1980
This paper reports attempts to alter children's moral judgments via short-term training of roletaking skills in order to assess the degree of relationship between moral reasoning and roletaking. In a three phase procedure, 40 first-grade children (20 males and 20 females) were assigned to one of four experimental groups (empathic, reciprocal,…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Grade 1, Identification (Psychology)
Uphoff, Jane W.; and Others – 1983
Although role or perspective taking has been considered important for the development of mature social thought and behavior, and training for perspective taking has been used to remediate deficient behavior, few studies with either normal or disturbed populations have examined naturally occurring behaviors expected to correlate with…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Affective Measures, Behavior Problems, Children
Feldman, Robert S.; White, John B. – 1980
This study examines the possibility that ability to avoid detection of deceptive behavior via nonverbal behavior might be related to an individual's role-taking skill. Sixty-one 5 to 12 year-old boys and girls were led to be verbally deceptive or truthful by saying that they either had enjoyed or not enjoyed an unpleasant experience or had enjoyed…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Individual Differences, Nonverbal Communication
Rose, Samuel P. – 1991
This study examined the development of cognitive perspective taking skills and the lack of consistency across perspective taking measures in earlier studies. Four perspective taking measures were administered to 56 children between 4 and 10 years of age under two testing conditions. The high structure condition included multiple presentation of…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Development, Correlation
Paget, Katherine Frome – 1979
Research in developmental social cognition should detail commonalities between self and other as well as the self-other differentiation process. A method which indexed developmental changes in the understanding of both intersubjective rules of interpersonal behavior and subjective individual perspectives was devised to research questions…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Attribution Theory, Children, Developmental Psychology
Comuntzis-Page, Georgette – 1997
This study examines children's interpretations of a visual convention used in television interviews and incorporates as a framework Flavell's theory of the development sequence of understanding television (1990). Thirty-four children were individually shown a videotape of two people talking in an interview on a television news program. Children…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Childhood Attitudes, Children, Comprehension
Roke, Edward J.; And Others – 1980
It was hypothesized that both parental affection and the emphasizing of the feelings, thoughts, and intentions of others in discipline techniques are related to young children's cooperativeness. The cooperative behavior of 31 children was measured by both naturalistic observation and behavior ratings. Parents were interviewed and responded to five…
Descriptors: Affection, Behavior Rating Scales, Children, Cooperation
Hoffman, Martin L. – 1979
Empathic distress refers to the empathic response to another's pain, anxiety, or sadness. Empathic distress must be viewed as only one component of a person's response when observing someone in distress. Studies of empathy should be designed to rule out or control the non-empathic components insofar as possible. The importance of perception and…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Ability, Empathy
Ben Porath, Sigal R. – 2003
Legal and political theorists strive at expanding the scope of children's rights to cover further areas of their lives and choices. This paper suggests that this effort is misguided, and that the protection of children requires instituting adults' obligations, rather than broadening children's rights. Contrary to the common theoretical and…
Descriptors: Adult Child Relationship, Adults, Childhood Interests, Childhood Needs
Iannotti, Ronald J. – 1979
When assessing the influence of empathy on prosocial motivation, analyzing empathy alone would lead to a misunderstanding. We must also assess other elements of the situation, such as the altruist's coping skills and situational constraints. In a similar manner empathy itself should be conceptualized as a process with many elements. One way to…
Descriptors: Altruism, Children, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Measurement
Farber, Ellen A.; Moely, Barbara E. – 1980
Results of two studies investigating children's abilities to use different kinds of cues to infer another's affective state are reported in this paper. In the first study, 48 children (3, 4, and 6 to 7 years of age) were given three different kinds of tasks (interpersonal task, facial recognition task, and vocal recognition task). A cross-age…
Descriptors: Ability Identification, Affective Behavior, Age Differences, Children
Hoffman, Martin L. – 1979
A developmental model for an empathy-based prosocial motive is presented. The framework of the model is presented in terms of three components of empathy. The first component, empathic affective arousal, is discussed and six involuntary psychological mechanisms which underlie it are described briefly. These mechanisms, in the order in which they…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Altruism, Arousal Patterns, Association (Psychology)
Valtin, Renate; And Others – 1981
A study involving 26 children, aged five to eight years, employed a clinical interview method to examine the children's recognition and knowledge of rule violations in communication. The rules, derived from H. P. Grice's "be cooperative" principle, referred mainly to the maxim "be perspicuous, unequivocal, clear, and…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Children, Cognitive Development, Communication Research
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