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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

Showing 2,701 to 2,715 of 5,768 results
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Wachs, Theodore D.; Gurkas, Pinar; Kontos, Susan – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2004
Working within a person-process-context framework, we investigated the relation of the level of preschool children's compliance to child temperament, caregiver-child interaction in the child care setting, child care quality, and contextual chaos. Participants were 86 preschoolers and their teachers. Our database included both questionnaires and…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Predictor Variables, Compliance (Psychology), Child Behavior
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Feldman, Ruth; Sussman, Amy L.; Zigler, Edward – Journal of Applied Developmental Psychology, 2004
This study examined individual, marital, and social--contextual factors associated with the length of maternity and paternity leave and the parents' work adaptation at the transition to parenthood. Ninety-eight dual-earner parents of 3- to 5-month-old infants were surveyed following the mother's return to work. A shorter maternity leave (less than…
Descriptors: Fathers, Depression (Psychology), Mothers, Employed Parents
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Green, Sarah; Pring, Linda; Swettenham, John – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This study assessed theory of mind understanding in children with congenital profound visual impairment (CPVI): children who have had no access to visual information throughout development. Participants were 18 children with CPVI and no other impairments, aged between 5 and 11 years, and 18 children with normal vision, matched individually on…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Participant Characteristics, Mental Age, Visual Impairments
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Ojala, Kris; Nesdale, Drew – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Drawing from social identity theory (Tajfel & Turner, 1979), an experiment was carried out to determine the extent to which children's attitudes towards bullying could be moderated by in-group norms and perceived threat to group distinctiveness. The study investigated the responses of 120 male primary school students aged 10-13 years from five…
Descriptors: Bullying, Males, Group Dynamics, Social Attitudes
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Sobel, David M. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Researchers who advocate the hypothesis that cognitive development is akin to theory formation have also suggested that young children possess distinct systems for explaining physical, psychological, and biological principles (see, e.g., Wellman & Gelman, 1992). One way this has been investigated is by examining how children explain human action:…
Descriptors: Evidence, Rhetoric, Young Children, Psychology
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Kannass, Kathleen N.; Plumert, Jodie M.; McDermott, Jessica; Moore, Bethany; Durich, Nathan – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Four experiments were conducted to investigate the role of the physical context in supporting 3- to 5-year-olds' use of spatiotemporal organization in recall. Children were familiarized with several target items and their corresponding landmarks arranged along a path in a model park. After familiarization, an experimenter removed the target items…
Descriptors: Young Children, Physical Environment, Context Effect, Spatial Ability
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Blote, Anke W.; Van Otterloo, Sandra G.; Stevenson, Claire E.; Veenman, Marcel V. J. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This study investigated the development of the many-to-one counting strategy in 4- year-old children. In the first experiment, 52 children participated. Their development with respect to two kinds of tasks, a hidden-items task and a needed-items task, was studied over four sessions. Children (n = 28) who accurately used the many-to-one strategy in…
Descriptors: Children, Investigations, Computation, Learning Strategies
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Crosbie, Sharon L.; Howard, David; Dodd, Barbara J. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This study examined spoken-word recognition in children with specific language impairment (SLI) and normally developing children matched separately for age and receptive language ability. Accuracy and reaction times on an auditory lexical decision task were compared. Children with SLI were less accurate than both control groups. Two subgroups of…
Descriptors: Language Impairments, Word Recognition, Receptive Language, Language Aptitude
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Subbotsky, Eugene – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
In four experiments, 4-, 5-, 6- and 9-year-old children and adults were tested on the entrenchment of their magical beliefs and their beliefs in the universal power of physical causality. In Experiment 1, even 4-year-olds showed some understanding of the difference between ordinary and anomalous (magical) causal events, but only 6-year-olds and…
Descriptors: Young Children, Beliefs, Adults, Fantasy
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Krojgaard, Peter – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
The present review of object individuation in infancy is divided into five sections. The first section is a brief history of the field and an outline of the development of efficient methods for studying object individuation among infants. Sections 2 and 3 are structured around the empirical evidence obtained by using two different kinds of basic…
Descriptors: Evidence, Infants, History, Experiments
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Bradmetz, Joel; Schneider, Roland – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
A robust lag was evidenced between the attribution to an individual of a false belief about the world and the attribution of the false emotion associated with this false belief (Bradmetz & Schneider, 1999). This lag was unexpected in the frame of current theories of mind which consider that emotion has a rational cognitive basis. The present paper…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Young Children, Emotional Response, Misconceptions
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de Rosnay, Marc; Pons, Francisco; Harris, Paul L.; Morrell, Julian M. B. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
This study examines the contribution of children's linguistic ability and mothers' use of mental-state language to young children's understanding of false belief and their subsequent ability to make belief-based emotion attributions. In Experiment 1, children (N = 51) were given three belief-based emotion-attribution tasks. A standard task in…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Video Technology, Mothers, Semantics
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Howley, Mary; Howe, Christine – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Recent research using theory-of-mind tasks has rekindled interest in the possibility that social interaction makes a significant contribution to cognitive development. It is proposed here that this contribution may be most pronounced with phenomena that, like belief or affective states, are internal and abstract. A more modest contribution is…
Descriptors: Deafness, Interpersonal Relationship, Interaction, Cognitive Development
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Wood, Jeffrey J.; Emmerson, Natasha A.; Cowan, Philip A. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
The association between early parent-child attachment security and peer rejection among preschool children was examined. Children in three preschool classrooms (N = 37) participated. Mothers rated their children's attachment security at age 3 years on the Attachment Q-Set (Waters, 1987). Sociometric ratings were collected from classmates at age 4…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Attachment Behavior, Rejection (Psychology), Security (Psychology)
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Raman, Lakshmi; Winer, Gerald A. – British Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2004
Three studies investigated developmental changes in immanent justice responding by asking participants to respond to vignettes in which a person's bad behaviour was followed by a negative consequence. Study 1 consisted of 152 sixth graders and 128 college students and presented participants with a vignette that examined the notion of bad people…
Descriptors: Justice, Responses, Age Differences, Individual Development
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