The Impact Of Cognitive Map Reading Tasks On The Ability To Navigate With A Map

Download The Impact Of Cognitive Map Reading Tasks On The Ability To Navigate With A Map PDF/ePub or read online books in Mobi eBooks. Click Download or Read Online button to get The Impact Of Cognitive Map Reading Tasks On The Ability To Navigate With A Map book now. This website allows unlimited access to, at the time of writing, more than 1.5 million titles, including hundreds of thousands of titles in various foreign languages.
Wayfinding and Navigation: Strengths and Weaknesses in Atypical and Clinical Populations

Author: Chiara Meneghetti
language: en
Publisher: Frontiers Media SA
Release Date: 2020-12-09
This eBook is a collection of articles from a Frontiers Research Topic. Frontiers Research Topics are very popular trademarks of the Frontiers Journals Series: they are collections of at least ten articles, all centered on a particular subject. With their unique mix of varied contributions from Original Research to Review Articles, Frontiers Research Topics unify the most influential researchers, the latest key findings and historical advances in a hot research area! Find out more on how to host your own Frontiers Research Topic or contribute to one as an author by contacting the Frontiers Editorial Office: frontiersin.org/about/contact.
The Impact of Scale on Children’s Spatial Thought

In this book, Cathleen Heil addresses the question of how to conceptually understand children’s spatial thought in the context of geometry education. She proposes that in order to help children develop their abilities to successfully grasp and manipulate the spatial relations they experience in their everyday lives, spatial thought should not only be addressed in written or tabletop settings at school. Instead, geometry education should also focus on settings involving real space, such as during reasoning with maps. In a first part of this book, she theoretically addresses the construct of spatial thought at different scales of space from a cognitive psychological point of view and shows that maps can be rich sources for spatial thinking. In a second part, she proposes how to measure children’s spatial thought in a paper-and-pencil setting and map-based setting in real space. In a third, empirical part, she examines the relations between children’s spatial thought in those two settings both at a manifest and latent level.