ABSTRACT

When this book was first published, David Olson was examining the developing representation and use of diagonals in the context of much larger questions, questions also explored by Vygotsky, Cassirer, Gombrich, and Bruner. These include such issues as conceptual development, conceptual change, and stage-like transitions in one's knowledge and belief. Some of these problems remain at virtually the same stage of solution to this day. Other problems have indeed been solved or at least come closer to solution, leading the author to think about the precise cognitive representations that allowed for the cognitive growth he examined in such scrupulous detail.

The author hopes that both readers and re-readers of this volume will be led to wonder -- as he did while working on the book -- just what there is about a simple diagonal that makes its reproduction so difficult. In so doing, readers will again be reminded of the remarkable resources that children bring to bear on their understanding of the world as well as the blind spots that no simple telling can quite fill in.

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|15 pages

Conceptualizing Conceptualizing

The Diagonal as an Interesting Problem

chapter 3|17 pages

The Nature of the Difficulty

chapter 4|15 pages

The Effects of Instruction 1

chapter 5|20 pages

The Change in the Mind of the Child

chapter 6|33 pages

Instruction Revisited

Perceptual, Motor and Linguistic Factors in Cognitive Development

part 2|21 pages

Part II Perceptual-Motor and Verbal Training in the Acquisition of Diagonality

chapter 7|23 pages

Personal and Cultural Experience in Conceptual Development

The Acquisition of the Diagonal in East Africa

chapter 10|32 pages

Conclusions

Some Aspects of a Theory of Cognitive Development