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The development of metacognitive awareness in memory,communication, and attention
Authors:Steven R. Yussen  J.Elizabeth Bird
Affiliation:University of Wisconsin USA
Abstract:Four- and six-year-olds were asked questions about hypothetical situations in which a child was to perform one of three cognitive activities: (1) to remember something, (2) to communicate a message, or (3) to attend to a visual array. Questions focused on the child's understanding of the following four facts about the variables under study: (1) that it is easier to cognize about a shorter than a longer list (length), (2) that it is easier to cognize in the absence of noise than in its presence (noise), (3) that an adult or older child will find a cognitive problem to be easier than will a younger child (age), and (4) that it is generally easier to cognize with more time than with less time (time). Results indicated that the pattern of understanding was the same across the different cognitive activities, that there was a higher level of accuracy in answering questions about length and noise than about age and time, and that, over all, the 6-year-olds were more accurate than the 4-year-olds.
Keywords:Send reprint requests to Steven R. Yussen   Department of Educational Psychology   University of Wisconsin   Madison   WI 53706.
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