International audienceEvents involving motion in fall are differentiated psychologically from events involving horizontal motion. Do children associate motion down inclines more with motion along horizontals or more with motion in fall, or do they even treat it as an integration of the two? The question was raised over 20 years ago but never satisfactorily answered, so the principal aim of the reported research was to take matters forward. Children (n = 144) aged 5 to 11 years were assessed while predicting natural dynamic events along a horizontal, in fall, and down an incline. They were required to make predictions of speed with heavy and light balls and under changes in incline heights. The results show that, consistent with previous wor...
The conceptual understanding that children display when predicting physical events has been shown to...
A study is reported where 118 participants aged between 10 years and early 20s drew the trajectories...
A small but growing body of evidence suggests that alongside misconceptions in predictions about obj...
Events involving motion in fall are differentiated psychologically from events involving horizontal ...
AbstractResearch with primary school children indicates while younger children believe a light ball ...
Previous research indicates children reason in different ways about horizontal motion and motion in ...
Research with primary school children indicates while younger children believe a light ball will rol...
Recent research with primary school children has indicated that while younger children believe a lig...
Previous recent work has outlined that throughout middle childhood the ability to integrate knowledg...
AbstractPrevious recent work has outlined that throughout middle childhood the ability to integrate ...
**Background**\ud \ud Children are not blank slates when they begin school; they bring prior concept...
144 children aged 5 to 12 years made initial predictions about the speeds of a heavy and a light bal...
Various studies to-date have demonstrated children hold ill-conceived expressed beliefs about the ph...
This study investigated 5- to 13-year-old children's performance in solving horizontal projectil...
Children are not blank slates when they begin school; instead, they bring prior conceptions about th...
The conceptual understanding that children display when predicting physical events has been shown to...
A study is reported where 118 participants aged between 10 years and early 20s drew the trajectories...
A small but growing body of evidence suggests that alongside misconceptions in predictions about obj...
Events involving motion in fall are differentiated psychologically from events involving horizontal ...
AbstractResearch with primary school children indicates while younger children believe a light ball ...
Previous research indicates children reason in different ways about horizontal motion and motion in ...
Research with primary school children indicates while younger children believe a light ball will rol...
Recent research with primary school children has indicated that while younger children believe a lig...
Previous recent work has outlined that throughout middle childhood the ability to integrate knowledg...
AbstractPrevious recent work has outlined that throughout middle childhood the ability to integrate ...
**Background**\ud \ud Children are not blank slates when they begin school; they bring prior concept...
144 children aged 5 to 12 years made initial predictions about the speeds of a heavy and a light bal...
Various studies to-date have demonstrated children hold ill-conceived expressed beliefs about the ph...
This study investigated 5- to 13-year-old children's performance in solving horizontal projectil...
Children are not blank slates when they begin school; instead, they bring prior conceptions about th...
The conceptual understanding that children display when predicting physical events has been shown to...
A study is reported where 118 participants aged between 10 years and early 20s drew the trajectories...
A small but growing body of evidence suggests that alongside misconceptions in predictions about obj...