According to the information-processing perspective, what cognitive advances do schoolchildren make in terms of selective attention, memory skills, processing capacity, knowledge, and metacognition?
Given these changes, how should a sixth-grade classroom
differ from a first-grade classroom?
What will be an ideal response?
Selective attention improves; children begin to use storage and retrieval strategies;
their processing capacity expands, as working memory improves and mental
activities become more automatic; their knowledge base expands and they become
better able to recognize and use effective cognitive strategies. Sixth-grade teachers,
therefore, should offer problems that demand more concentration, challenge the
student to choose and use various cognitive strategies, enhance memory skills, and
draw on the student's growing knowledge base and processing capacity. First-grade
teachers should be aware of their students' cognitive limitations, encouraging
intellectual curiosity and perseverance, coaching them in simple cognitive strategies,
and exposing them to a variety of subject matter to help enlarge their knowledge
base.
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a. True b. False Indicate whether the statement is true or false
Compare and contrast the authoritative and authoritarian child-rearing styles
What will be an ideal response?
While eating lunch in her highchair, Darci, a six-month-old baby, accidentally drops her spoon. After dropping her spoon, Darci is likely to ___
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a. increase; increase b. decrease; decrease c. decrease; have no effect d. increase; decrease