Developmental changes in children's use of semantic information in recall |
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Authors: | Kathleen Corsale Peter A Ornstein |
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Affiliation: | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill USA |
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Abstract: | Third and seventh graders (age 9 and 13 years) were randomly assigned to three instructional groups and engaged in a sort/recall task. The instructions emphasized either (a) recall of the items, (b) meaningful organization of the items, or (c) meaningful organization and recall of the items. Regardless of instruction, seventh graders sorted 20 unrelated items into semantically-based groupings and exhibited elevated levels of recall. Third graders instructed to group items to facilitate recall formed seemingly random groupings and recalled significantly fewer items than third graders instructed to make semantically-based groupings, even when some of these latter subjects were unaware of a subsequent recall trial. The results indicated that young children are capable of adult-like organizational strategies but are unaware of their relevance to recall performance or conditions under which organization might be an appropriate strategy. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to Kathleen Corsale who is now at the Learning Research and Development Center University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 15260. |
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