Learners can benefit from seeing an instructor gesture while explaining various concepts (e.g., Singer & Goldin-Meadow, 2005). Like non-declarative knowledge, gestures are often processed unconsciously (e.g., Goldin-Meadow, Alibali & Church, 1993). However, gesture is also seamlessly integrated with speech, a vehicle for declarative (or consciously verbalizable) knowledge (Kendon, 1980; McNeill, 1992). Gesture may partially benefit learning by representing non-declarative knowledge at the same time as speech, a representation of declarative knowledge, and thus influence a learner’s developing declarative knowledge. I explore how seeing gestures may help learners transition from a state of non-declarative (or implicit) knowledge to a state o...
Children's gestures can reveal important information about heir problem-solving strategies. Thi...
Speakers often use gesture to demonstrate how to perform actions - for example, they might show how ...
This paper aims to determine whether iconic tracing gestures produced while speaking constitute part...
Gesture researchers have focused on how gestures benefit learning. For example, data have shown that...
When people talk, they move their hands—they gesture. Although these movements might appear to be me...
Speakers move their hands when they talk—they gesture. These gestures can signal whether the speaker...
When people talk they gesture, and those gestures often reflect thoughts not expressed in their word...
Prior research has shown that gestures that co-occur with speech can improve understanding of abstra...
ABSTRACT—Teachers gesture when they teach, and those gestures do not always convey the same informat...
Although the general consensus is that gesture supports learning across a wide range of learning con...
International audienceWhen students speak about material objects they have at hand, it has been prop...
Previous studies have shown that teachers’ gestures are beneficial for student learning. In this res...
Most theories of pragmatics take as the basic unit of communication the verbal content of spoken or ...
Abstract During mathematics instruction, teachers often make links between different representations...
Language and gesture are highly interdependent systems that reciprocally influence each other. For e...
Children's gestures can reveal important information about heir problem-solving strategies. Thi...
Speakers often use gesture to demonstrate how to perform actions - for example, they might show how ...
This paper aims to determine whether iconic tracing gestures produced while speaking constitute part...
Gesture researchers have focused on how gestures benefit learning. For example, data have shown that...
When people talk, they move their hands—they gesture. Although these movements might appear to be me...
Speakers move their hands when they talk—they gesture. These gestures can signal whether the speaker...
When people talk they gesture, and those gestures often reflect thoughts not expressed in their word...
Prior research has shown that gestures that co-occur with speech can improve understanding of abstra...
ABSTRACT—Teachers gesture when they teach, and those gestures do not always convey the same informat...
Although the general consensus is that gesture supports learning across a wide range of learning con...
International audienceWhen students speak about material objects they have at hand, it has been prop...
Previous studies have shown that teachers’ gestures are beneficial for student learning. In this res...
Most theories of pragmatics take as the basic unit of communication the verbal content of spoken or ...
Abstract During mathematics instruction, teachers often make links between different representations...
Language and gesture are highly interdependent systems that reciprocally influence each other. For e...
Children's gestures can reveal important information about heir problem-solving strategies. Thi...
Speakers often use gesture to demonstrate how to perform actions - for example, they might show how ...
This paper aims to determine whether iconic tracing gestures produced while speaking constitute part...