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Kelemen, Deborah; Seston, Rebecca; Saint Georges, Laure – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2012
There is currently debate about the emergence of children's ability to reason about artifacts by reference to their intended design. We present two studies demonstrating that, while 3-year-olds have emerging insights, 4-year-old children display an explicit, well-rounded, adult-like understanding of the way design constrains an artifact's physical…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Children, Age Differences, Recognition (Psychology)
Casler, Krista; Kelemen, Deborah – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2008
Teleo-functional explanations account for objects in terms of purpose, helping us understand objects such as pencils (for writing) and body parts such as ears (for hearing). Western-educated adults restrict teleo-functional attributions to artifact, biological, and behavioral phenomena, considering such explanations less appropriate for nonliving…
Descriptors: Children, Developmental Continuity, Age Differences, Scientific Literacy
Kelemen, Deborah; DiYanni, Cara – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2005
Two separate bodies of research suggest that young children have (a) a broad tendency to reason about natural phenomena in terms of a purpose (e.g., Kelemen, 1999c) and (b) an orientation toward "creationist" accounts of natural entity origins whether or not they come from fundamentalist religious backgrounds (e.g., Evans, 2001). This study…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Young Children, Creationism, Thinking Skills

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