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                                       Details for article 6 of 6 found articles
 
 
  Young Children's Understanding of the Conditions for Knowledge Acquisition
 
 
Title: Young Children's Understanding of the Conditions for Knowledge Acquisition
Author: Miller, Scott A.
Hardin, Cynthia A.
Montgomery, Derek E.
Appeared in: Journal of cognition and development
Paging: Volume 4 (2003) nr. 3 pages 325-356
Year: 2003-08-01
Contents: We report 3 studies directed to children's understanding of how evidence leads to knowledge. The studies as a whole span a range of ages (4-, 6-, and 8-year-olds), a variety of sources of information (perception, communication, and inference), and a number of targets or recipients of the information (adult, child, baby, and self). Perception proved to be the easiest source to understand, and inference was the most difficult. There was no difference in the accuracy of judgments for the self and judgments for others. Judgments were least accurate for the baby, primarily because children tended to overestimate babies' ability to acquire knowledge from communication or inference. Although performance in general improved with age, the tendency to overestimate the baby was greatest among the oldest children. The results are discussed in terms of children's understanding of 2 contributors to knowledge formation: situational (the nature and adequacy of the informational source) and individual (the cognitive readiness of the recipient of the information).
Publisher: Psychology Press
Source file: Elektronische Wetenschappelijke Tijdschriften
 
 

                             Details for article 6 of 6 found articles
 
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