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Sitton, Sarah C. – Mental Retardation, 1975
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Development, Exceptional Child Research, Memory
SHAPOVALENKO, S.G. – 1964
DEVELOPMENT OF NON-MACHINE PROGRAMED INSTRUCTION ACCORDING TO STATE-SPECIFIED EDUCATIONAL GOALS AND TRADITIONAL PSYCHOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES WILL ALLOW EFFICIENT, INDEPENDENT, CONTROLLED LEARNING, BUT MUST BE USED IN COMBINATION WITH CONVENTIONAL INSTRUCTION TO FORTIFY IN PUPILS THE FEELING OF COLLECTIVISM. EXPERIMENTAL WORK WITH SEVENTH GRADE SHOWS…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Algorithms, Chemistry, Conventional Instruction
McDorman, Mary Ben Erwin – 1976
This study investigated the effects of the direction of print on learning-disabled students' and normal students' abilities to learn the sequence in which sentences are presented, to comprehend sentences, and to recognize relationships among sentences. Four groups of 12 learning-disabled pupils and four groups of 12 normal pupils between the ages…
Descriptors: Doctoral Dissertations, Elementary Education, Failure, Learning Disabilities
Moore, Betty Jean – 1976
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of sequential visual-motor skills, developed as described in "Visual Motor Development" (VMD), on the reading achievement of children enrolled in a remedial reading program in a San Antonio elementary school. Data were obtained from 52 children in first through sixth grades divided…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Motor Development, Program Evaluation, Reading Achievement
Carlson, Nancy A.; And Others – 1974
Described is a system (created by the Great Lakes Region Special Education Instructional Materials Center) for classifying auditory learners and matching them to appropriate auditory learning experiences. The learner classification system outlined utilizes an organizational table that accommodates five learner variables (mental age, chronological…
Descriptors: Aural Learning, Child Development, Classification, Cognitive Development
Christie, Lu S.; McKenzie, Hugh S. – 1974
Discussed is the use of minimum behavioral objectives to provide evaluation of special education in regular classrooms. Literature which supports the mainstreaming of moderately handicapped children is reviewed briefly. Application of the behavioral model of education on the community level is considered in terms of the basic skills which comprise…
Descriptors: Accountability, Behavioral Objectives, Exceptional Child Education, Handicapped Children
Reichert, Conrad A. – 1971
A study was made of the effect of various learner and task characteristics on learning from scrambled frames in an instructional program. The independent variables were: sequence (scrambled vs. logical), grade, sequence length, criterion test complexity, sex, IQ, mathematics achievement, and reading comprehension. The dependent variables were:…
Descriptors: Analysis of Variance, Fixed Sequence, Intelligence Differences, Learning
Tuckman, Bruce W. – 1969
The following postulates provide the basis for development of an innovative student-centered curriculum: (1) A curriculum must be defined in terms of the students' educational needs; (2) for the majority of students, occupational goals require less than a bachelor's degree; (3) a curriculum must be defined in terms of the psychological structure…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Flexible Scheduling
Langstaff, Anne L.; And Others – 1973
Compared was the performance of 17 preschool and 10 early elementary educable mentally retarded (EMR) children with the performance of 50 normal preschool children on a developmental sequence of tasks in visual perception. Tested were the skills of recognition, discrimination, recall, and reconstruction of common objects, size concepts, shape…
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Mental Retardation, Mild Mental Retardation, Perception Tests
Whipple, Gertrude – 1967
This bulletin lists map concepts and skills in a workable, sequential order of teaching in grades 1 through 6. By using the grade level lists the teacher perceives his part in the total program. The list can also be used to test children before they advance to the next sequence. For each set of skills the bulletin outlines what to teach and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education, Geographic Concepts, Geography Instruction
Anastasio, John – 1973
A study was devised to determine the efficacy of picture sequencing as a method of evaluating a child's interaction with a film, particularly children who are low in verbal expression. A series of five photographs were used which illustrated important points in a film about the ill effects of smoking. Subjects were selected from two primary…
Descriptors: Cognitive Measurement, Comprehension, Films, Mild Mental Retardation
DeVries, Rheta – 1971
A study was conducted to clarify a number of issues related to Piaget's theory of invariant sequantiality in child cognitive development. Ss were 143 middle-class white children of bright, average and retarded psychometric abilities (measured by performance on the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test). Bright and average Ss were chronologically aged…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Tests, Compensation (Concept)
Rudnitsky, Alan N.; Posner, George J. – 1976
This study investigates the effects of content sequence on student learning. The treatments, a spatial and conceptual instructional sequence each consisting of identical content elements, were administered to students in a two-year college Botany course. Hypotheses tested were that sequence would have an effect on student perceptions of the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Higher Education, Learning
Hewitt, Heather – Australian Journal of Mental Retardation, 1978
The paper outlines an educational scheme whereby teachers of severely mentally retarded and multiply-handicapped children (including deaf/blind children) can assess the prelanguage levels of children on a hierarchical language schedule, which culminates in the acquisition of natural gesture. (Author)
Descriptors: Body Language, Deaf Blind, Educational Assessment, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Zimmerman, Barry J. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1978
As an example, two aspects of children's conservation are explained: decalages and the shift from perceptual to quantitative cues. This approach, relative to structuralist formulation, involves cognitive factors such as prior learning, as well as impinging social experience. It is compatible with Piaget's theory, yet simpler and more flexible. (CP)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Concept Formation, Conservation (Concept)
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