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Original scientific paper

Implicit theories of intelligence in preschool children

Joško Sindik ; Institute for anthropological research, Zagreb, Croatia
Ranka Đunđenac ; Kindergarten “Ivanić-Grad”, Ivanić-Grad, Croatia


Full text: croatian pdf 1.396 Kb

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Full text: english pdf 1.396 Kb

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Abstract

The aim of this study was to examine the implicit theories of intelligence in preschool children. In addition to the description of implicit theories of intelligence in preschoolers, the aim was to examine differences in the incidence of cognitive and non-cognitive aspects of intelligence in answers given by preschool children. The participants in the study were 93 preschool children who were regular attendees of a kindergarten, in the age range of 4-7 years, of both sexes. The main finding is that the results show expected response of unequally distributed representation of responses in individual cognitive and non-cognitive categories, with a distinct dominance of non-cognitive responses, both in the abstract, and particularly, in the concrete questions posed to children. This is reflected in a higher number of statistically significant differences related to the particular category of S (social skills and personality traits). It is shown that social (but not verbal) skills are significantly prevalent in children's descriptions of intelligence.

Keywords

cognitive categories; preschoolers; representation

Hrčak ID:

104577

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/104577

Publication date:

29.6.2013.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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