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The Psychology of the Child

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TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss factors in mental development, including the development of perception, concepts, and operations of thought and interpersonal relations, as well as the three levels in the transition from action to operation.
Abstract
* Introduction The Sensori-Motor Level * Sensori-motor Intelligence * The Construction of Reality * The Cognitive Aspect of Sensori-motor Reactions * The Affective Aspect of Sensori-motor Reactions The Development of Perception * Perceptual Consistencies and Perceptual Causality * Field Effects * The Perceptual Activities * Perceptions, Concepts, and Operations The Semiotic or Symbolic Function * The Semiotic Function and Imitation * Symbolic Play * Drawing * Mental Images * Memory and the Structure of Image-Memories * Language The Concrete Operations of Thought and Interpersonal Relations * The Three Levels in the Transition from Action to Operation * The Genesis of the Concrete Operations * Representation of the Universe: Causality and Chance * Social and Affective Interactions * Moral Feelings and Judgments * Conclusion The Preadolescent and the Propositional Operations * Formal Thought and the Combinatorial System * The Two Reversibilities * The Formal Operatory Schemes * The Induction of Laws and the Dissociation of Factors * The Affective Transformations * Conclusion: Factors in Mental Development

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The development of expertise in geography : A cognitive developmental approach to geographic education

TL;DR: It is argued that college-level instruction likewise depends upon appreciating the cognitive-developmental level of students as well as their level of geographic expertise, and set geographic instruction within a Piagetian approach to cognitive development.
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‘Chocolate … makes you autism’: impairment, disability and childhood identities

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss perceptions and experiences of impairment and disability from the perspectives of learning disabled children, their parents and their social workers, and conclude that adults often fail to take into account the views and experiences, and that these children developed their own interpretations of impairment based on their experiences and interactions with others.
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What, if Anything, is Regressed About Hypnotic Age Regression? A Review of the Empirical Literature

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review 60 years of empirical studies that have investigated whether there is a reinstatement of childhood psychological or physiological faculties during hypnotic age regression, Results suggest that if regression is defined as the extent to which hypnotized subjects conform to childhood norms and control subjects do not, then the mental and physiological activity of hypnotically age-regressed subjects is not regressed; it appears to be essentially adult.
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Psychosocial development and leader performance of military officer cadets

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on a longitudinal study of West Point college students over four years, addressing three questions: (1) do military officer-cadets grow or change in their basic level of psychosocial development [Kegan, R. (1982). The Evolving Self: Problem and Process in Human Development. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
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Setting Theoretical and Empirical Foundations for Assessing Scientific Inquiry and Discovery in Educational Programs.

TL;DR: The authors developed measures of student competence in conducting scientific inquiry and developed two assessment techniques, Scientific Inquiry Capabilities and Scientific Discovery, which are indicators of diverse aspects of competence in scientific inquiry.