Basic and Applied Perspectives on Learning, Cognition, and Development

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achievement
american
American College Test
American Fourth Graders
asian
bias
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Cl Method
Cl Research
Competition Model
connectionist models
cross-cultural education
Differential Points
east
East Asian Children
East Asian Students
East Asian Teachers
Eleventh Graders
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eq_non-fiction
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ethological perspective
evolutionary influences on learning
Gene Culture Coevolution
Inflectional Morphology
Japanese Students
math
Math Math
Mathematical Achievement
mathematical cognition
mathematics
National Education Goals Panel
OVS
OVS Word Order
Piagetian theory
Sasak
Self-organizing Feature Map
shape
Shape Bias
Street Math
students
symbolic representation
teachers
Vice Versa
Word Learning

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805818338
  • Weight: 612g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Although current views of cognitive development owe a great deal to Jean Piaget, this field has undergone profound change in the years since Piaget's death. This can be witnessed both in the influence connectionist and dynamical system models have exerted on theories of cognition and language, and in how basic work in cognitive development has begun to influence those who work in applied (e.g., educational) settings. This volume brings together an eclectic group of distinguished experts who collectively represent the full spectrum of basic to applied aspects of cognitive development.

This book begins with chapters on cognition and language that represent the current Zeitgeist in cognitive science approaches to cognitive development broadly defined. Following a brief commentary on this work, the next section turns to more applied issues. Although the focus here is on arithmetic learning, the research programs described have profound implications for virtually all aspects of education and learning. The last chapter views cognitive development from the perspective of ethology and evolutionary biology, and in so doing provides a theoretical perspective that is novel and in some ways, prescient: specifically, how can our views of cognition incorporate recent work in biology?