Context and Cognition

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3rd
3rd Grade Classroom
Adaptive Experts
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Category=JMR
Children's Early Mathematical Development
Children’s Early Mathematical Development
classroom culture
cognitive
Cognitive Incongruity
Comprehension Activity
Conditional Rules
conservation
Creative Planning
Creative Planning Process
Deontic Rules
development
ecological psychology
Em Ily
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Everyday Math
Everyday Practice
generalisation across contexts
grade
Hypothetico Deductive Reasoning
Informal Models
knowledge transfer
Main Events
Math Learning
Math Practice
mathematical reasoning
Medicine Problems
problems
proportional
Proportional Reasoning
Proportionality Problems
reasoning
Selection Task
situated learning
social cognition
Solve Proportional Problems
Street Vendors
task
Wild Ducks
word
Word Problems

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138646872
  • Weight: 520g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Jun 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1993, the study of cognitive development in children had moved from a focus on the intellectual processes of the individual studied in relative isolation, as in the classic work of Piaget, to a concern in the 1970s and 1980s with social cognition characterized by Vygotsky's views. In the years following, the trend toward an understanding of the situated nature of cognition had evolved even further and the extent to which thinking and knowing are inextricably linked to contextual constraints was at last being defined.

Experts of international repute, the authors of this important book examine the recent literature on situated cognition in children. They explain contextual sensitivity in relation to ecological theories of cognition, and contrast intuitive reasoning in mathematical and other scientific domains with the failure of such reasoning in formal school contexts. Centrally concerned with the question of generalizability and transfer of knowledge from one situation to another, the contributors point to practical implications for understanding how intellectual competence can be made to generalize between "informal" and "formal" situations.