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The effect of pretraining and feedback on the reasoning of young children
Authors:Charles C. Spiker  Joan H. Cantor  Gayle V. Klouda
Affiliation:University of Iowa USA
Abstract:Three experiments are reported in which kindergarten and first-grade children were given one-trial multidimensional reasoning tasks that were modifications of those used by T. C. Toppino (1980, Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 30, 496–512). In the first two experiments, the nature of the stimulus compounds (partitioned or unitary) was varied in a series of tasks of increasing complexity. First-grade children (Experiment 1) and kindergarten children (Experiment 2) performed extremely well on all of the tasks presented. Experiment 3 was designed to identify factors that contribute to these high levels of performance, relative to those obtained under the conditions used by Toppino (1980). The results indicated that a combination of feedback information and preliminary experience with simple forms of the tasks are sufficient to produce the high performance levels, and that the verbal labeling of stimulus components is not an essential constituent of the training.
Keywords:Requests for reprints should be sent to Charles C. Spiker   Department of Psychology   University of Iowa   Iowa City   IA 52242.
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