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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

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Teachers2
Showing 106 to 120 of 415 results
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Geary, David C.; Bailey, Drew H.; Littlefield, Andrew; Wood, Phillip; Hoard, Mary K.; Nugent, Lara – Cognitive Development, 2009
Kindergarten to third grade mathematics achievement scores from a prospective study of mathematical development (n = 306) were subjected to latent growth trajectory analyses. The four corresponding classes included children with mathematical learning disability (MLD, 6% of sample), and low (LA, 50%), typically (TA, 39%) and high (HA, 5%) achieving…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Mathematics Achievement, Intelligence Quotient, At Risk Students
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Kaufmann, L.; Vogel, S. E.; Starke, M.; Kremser, C.; Schocke, M. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Ordinality is--beyond numerical magnitude (i.e., quantity)--an important characteristic of the number system. There is converging empirical evidence that (intra)parietal brain regions mediate number magnitude processing. Furthermore, recent findings suggest that the human intraparietal sulcus (IPS) supports magnitude and ordinality in a…
Descriptors: Number Systems, Learning Disabilities, Brain, Numeracy
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Ashkenazi, Sarit; Mark-Zigdon, Nitza; Henik, Avishai – Cognitive Development, 2009
Children in third and fourth grades suffering from developmental dyscalculia (DD) and typically developing children were asked to compare numbers to a standard. In two separate blocks, they were asked to compare a number between 1 and 9 to 5, or a two-digit number between 10 and 99 to 55. In the single-digit comparisons, DD children were…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Reaction Time, Learning Disabilities, Mathematics Skills
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Murphy, Melissa M.; Mazzocco, Michele M. M. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Fragile X syndrome is a common genetic disorder associated with executive function deficits and poor mathematics achievement. In the present study, we examined changes in math performance during the elementary and middle school years in girls with fragile X syndrome, changes in the working memory loads under which children could complete a…
Descriptors: Genetic Disorders, Early Intervention, Females, Mathematics Achievement
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Dowker, Ann – Cognitive Development, 2009
339 children aged 6 and 7 at Oxford primary schools took part in a study of arithmetic. 204 of the children had been selected by their teachers as having mathematical difficulties and the other 135 children were unselected. They were assigned to an Addition Performance Level on the basis of a calculation pretest, and then given Dowker's (1998)…
Descriptors: Computation, Arithmetic, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Skills
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Sobel, David M.; Buchanan, David W. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Previous research has shown that preschoolers extend labels and internal properties of objects based on those objects' causal properties, even when the causal properties conflict with the objects' perceptual appearance [Nazzi, T., & Gopnik, A. (2000). "A shift in children's use of perceptual and causal cues to categorization." "Developmental…
Descriptors: Cues, Conflict, Preschool Children, Classification
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Kim, Sunae; Kalish, Charles W. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Ownership is not a "natural" property of objects, but is determined by human intentions. Facts about who owns what may be altered by appropriate decisions. However, young children often deny the efficacy of transfer decisions, asserting that original owners retain rights to their property. In Experiment 1, 4-5-year-old and 7-8-year-old children…
Descriptors: Ownership, Intention, Children, Age Differences
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Wagner, Laura; Swensen, Lauren D.; Naigles, Letitia R. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Three studies using the intermodal preferential looking paradigm examined onset of productive comprehension of tense/aspect morphology in English. When can toddlers understand these forms with novel verbs and novel events? The first study used familiar verbs and showed that 26-36-month olds correctly matched a past/perfective form ("-ed" or…
Descriptors: Verbs, Morphology (Languages), Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Toddlers
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Barth, Hilary; Starr, Ariel; Sullivan, Jessica – Cognitive Development, 2009
Previous studies have suggested that children's learning of the relation between number words and approximate numerosities depends on their verbal counting ability, and that children exhibit no knowledge of mappings between number words and approximate numerical magnitudes for number words outside their productive verbal counting range. In the…
Descriptors: Numbers, Exhibits, Cognitive Mapping, Computation
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Robinson, Katherine M.; Dube, Adam K. – Cognitive Development, 2009
Children's understanding of the inversion concept in multiplication and division problems (i.e., that on problems of the form "d multiplied by e/e" no calculations are required) was investigated. Children in Grades 6, 7, and 8 completed an inversion problem-solving task, an assessment of procedures task, and a factual knowledge task of simple…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Knowledge Level, Early Adolescents, Preadolescents
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Frazier, Brandy N.; Gelman, Susan A. – Cognitive Development, 2009
This study examined the development of an understanding of authenticity among 112 children (preschoolers, kindergarten, 1st graders, and 4th graders) and 119 college students. Participants were presented with pairs of photographs depicting authentic and non-authentic objects and asked to pick which one belongs in a museum and which one they would…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Museums, Kindergarten, Grade 4
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Shtulman, Andrew – Cognitive Development, 2009
The ability to differentiate possible events from impossible ones is an invaluable skill when reasoning about claims that transcend the perceptual evidence at hand, yet preschool-aged children do not readily make this differentiation when reasoning about physically extraordinary events [Shtulman, A., & Carey, S. (2007). "Improbable or impossible?…
Descriptors: Adults, Child Development, Preschool Children, Cognitive Development
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Defeyter, Margaret Anne; Russo, Riccardo; McPartlin, Pamela Louise – Cognitive Development, 2009
Items studied as pictures are better remembered than items studied as words even when test items are presented as words. The present study examined the development of this picture superiority effect in recognition memory. Four groups ranging in age from 7 to 20 years participated. They studied words and pictures, with test stimuli always presented…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Test Items, Reaction Time, Familiarity
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Casler, Krista; Terziyan, Treysi; Greene, Kimberly – Cognitive Development, 2009
When children use objects like adults, are they simply tracking regularities in others' object use, or are they demonstrating a normatively defined awareness that there are right and wrong ways to act? This study provides the first evidence for the latter possibility. Young 2- and 3-year-olds (n = 32) learned functions of 6 artifacts, both…
Descriptors: Toddlers, Child Behavior, Object Manipulation, Feedback (Response)
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Blake, Peter R.; Harris, Paul L. – Cognitive Development, 2009
An understanding of ownership entails the recognition that ownership can be transferred permanently and the ability to differentiate legitimate from illegitimate transfers. Two experiments explored the development of this understanding in 2-, 3-, 4- and 5-year olds, using stories about gift-giving and stealing. The possibility that children use…
Descriptors: Ownership, Preschool Children, Age Differences, Bias
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