Mindblown: a blog about philosophy.

  • Parallel curriculum

    A type of curriculum in which two groups of students cover the same amount of material but at different speeds.  

  • Palmer method

    The traditional technique for teaching young children legible writing.  

  • Pacifier

    A device for babies to suck on, given to prevent them from sucking on thumbs and fingers. Though widely used, pacifiers can cause severe problems, such as choking, and can be a source of infection if they fall on the floor and are put back into the mouth without being cleaned. An artificial nipple, usually…

  • Overplacement

    A grade placement for which a child is of the right chronological age but too low a developmental age. Some experts in child development believe that over-placement is a major cause of failure at school, and as a result some parents have held their children back to have them be the oldest, and presumably, therefore,…

  • Overflow behavior

    In individual testing, such as developmental screening tests, any of a child’s actions or interplay that are not directly related to the test items, including innocuous small talk and attempts to distract the examiner from continuing with a test item that seems difficult.  

  • Overachiever

    A student whose academic performance is well above educators’ estimate of his or her potential, especially a student whose scores on standardized tests of ability are consistently lower than those on achievement tests. Outperforming expectations may result when a student has strong motivation to succeed and the ability to focus effort, sometimes with a specific…

  • Ovaries

    A pair of small, oval-shaped sex glands (gonads) in a woman, which produce the key female sex hormones, estrogen and progesterone, as well as the eggs (ow; singular, ovum). The ovaries are on either side of the uterus in the lower abdomen, lying under the fallopian tubes. At birth, a baby girl’s ovaries each contain…

  • Orthopedist

    A physician who specializes in diagnosing and treating diseases and injuries of bones and joints and associated muscles, tendons, cartilage, and ligaments. Orthopedists set and put casts on fractures as needed; perform surgery, as to repair birth defects or remove tumors, including arthroscopic surgery; and may also replace joints, as in a knee, hip, or…

  • Orthopedic handicap

    In education, a general term for a physical condition that adversely affects a child’s mobility and development of normal motor skills; also called physical handicap.  

  • Orthopedic devices

    A variety of mechanical aids and equipment developed to help people with orthopedic handicaps, especially in the areas of sitting, standing, walking, and using their hands, as well as maintaining balance and protecting the body from harm. These are basic necessities if the child is to develop other skills to the fullest.  

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