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what children can do with the guidance of a more skilled peer or adult
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the ability to focus on a single task or stimulus, while ignoring distracting information
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self-regulatory processes that enable adaptive responses to new situations or to reach a specific goal
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the ability to switch our focus between tasks
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what Piaget considered children speaking to themselves
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the third component of memory, also known as permanent memory
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the first stage of the memory system that stores sensory input in its raw form for a very brief duration
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the second stage of memory in which current conscious mental activity occurs
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Vygotsky’s belief that children think out loud
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he ability to recognize that moving or rearranging matter does not change the quantity
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the ability to think about other people’s thoughts
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According to Piaget, this helps them solidify new schemes they were developing cognitively
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the tendency of young children to think that everyone sees things in the same way as the child
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focusing on only one characteristic of an object to the exclusion of others
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temporary support given to a child to do a task
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a tendency to think that if two events occur simultaneously, one caused the other
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Attributing lifelike qualities to objects