Handbook of Child Psychology and Developmental Science 2015
DOI: 10.1002/9781118963418.childpsy213
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The Development of Reasoning

Abstract: This chapter discusses the course of development for deductive and inductive forms of reasoning across childhood and adolescence. Key theories of how best to account for that course are critiqued. The development of deduction is considered primarily with respect to syllogistic and conditional reasoning. Mental logic, metacognitive, and mental models accounts of deduction are contrasted and compared and the potential for rapprochement is identified. The development of inductive reasoning is discussed with respe… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…However, the NICHD has a wide gap between the wave at age 15 and the previous wave, which occurred 5 years earlier. We chose to examine relative income as a process within adolescence, as what is known about adolescent social cognition led us to believe that they should be more perceptive of the complex, subtle, and abstract signals of SES (Harter, ; Keating, ; Ricco, ). We believe the present study offers a distal snapshot of the proximal relation between relative income, social dissatisfaction, and internalizing and externalizing problems.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the NICHD has a wide gap between the wave at age 15 and the previous wave, which occurred 5 years earlier. We chose to examine relative income as a process within adolescence, as what is known about adolescent social cognition led us to believe that they should be more perceptive of the complex, subtle, and abstract signals of SES (Harter, ; Keating, ; Ricco, ). We believe the present study offers a distal snapshot of the proximal relation between relative income, social dissatisfaction, and internalizing and externalizing problems.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers should consider examining these possibilities developmentally, as people may acquire metamotivational beliefs via different routes depending on age. For example, it might be unreasonable to expect young children to acquire metamotivational knowledge via logical deduction given what we know about their cognitive development (Ricco, 2015).…”
Section: Development and Acquisition Of Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%
“…That deep engagement in science practice foster understanding of the epistemological foundations of science is of critical importance, rather than merely desirable. Students must come to recognize scientific claims not simply as accumulated (unquestioned and unchanging) facts or freely chosen opinions ("I personally don't believe in climate change"), but rather as judgments requiring evaluation in a framework of alternatives and evidence (Greene, Sandoval, & Braten, 2016;Moshman, 2015;Ricco, 2015). Science as argument has come into broad favor in science education (Berland & Hammer, 2012;Kuhn, 1993Kuhn, , 2010Manz, 2014;McNeill, 2011;Osborne, Erduran, & Simon, 2004), but without the epistemological foundation just indicated, debating scientific claims is a practice that can have only limited meaning to students.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%