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Froese, Linda; Roelle, Julian – Metacognition and Learning, 2023
In acquiring new conceptual knowledge, learners often engage in the generation of examples that illustrate the to-be-learned principles and concepts. Learners are, however, bad at judging the quality of self-generated examples, which can result in suboptimal regulation decisions. A promising means to foster judgment accuracy in this context is…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, College Students, Evaluation, Value Judgment
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Anne Bauer – Childhood Education, 2024
For education to be revolutionary, it must first be evolutionary. To ensure that our students are learning the lessons that will help them reach their full potential and make positive contributions to society, it is imperative that we don't just reflect upon what we are teaching, but also how we are teaching them. This article describes how…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Change Strategies, Learning, Story Telling
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Steininger, Tim M.; Wittwer, Jörg; Voss, Thamar – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2022
Successful teaching requires that student teachers acquire a conceptual understanding of teaching practices. A promising way to promote such a conceptual understanding is to provide student teachers with examples. We conducted a 3 (between-subjects factor "example format": reading, generation, classification) x 4 (within-subjects factor…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Learning Processes, Lesson Plans, Reading
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Pessia Tsamir; Regina Ovodenko; Dina Tirosh – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
This paper reports on students' conceptions of minima points. Written assignments and individual interviews uncovered salient, concept images, as well as erroneous "mis-out examples" that mistakenly regard examples as non-examples and "mis-in examples" that mistakenly grant non-examples the status of examples. We used Tall and…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Error Patterns, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics
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Muldner, Kasia; Jennings, Jay; Chiarelli, Veronica – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2023
This article reviews literature on worked examples in the context of programming activities. We focus on two types of examples, namely, code-tracing and code-generation, because there is sufficient research on these to warrant a review. We synthesize key results according to themes that emerged from the review. This synthesis aims to provide…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Programming, Computer Science Education, Literature Reviews
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Keith Gallagher; Nicole Engelke Infante – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2023
Expert mathematicians use examples and visual representations as part of their informal mathematics reasoning when constructing proofs. In contrast, the ways undergraduates reason and work toward creating proofs is an open area of investigation, particularly in advanced mathematics. Furthermore, research on students' reasoning in topology is…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Mathematics, Topology, Mathematics Skills
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van Harsel, Milou; Hoogerheide, Vincent; Janssen, Eva; Verkoeijen, Peter; van Gog, Tamara – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2022
Presenting novices with examples and problems is an effective and efficient way to acquire new problem-solving skills. Nowadays, examples and problems are increasingly presented in computer-based learning environments, in which learners often have to self-regulate their learning (i.e., choose what type of task to work on and when). Yet, it is…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Metacognition, Problem Based Learning, Problem Solving
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Safadi, Rafi' – International Journal of Science Education, 2022
Troubleshooting activities require students to diagnose teacher-crafted erroneous examples by detecting and explaining the conceptual errors driving them. In a previous study, the author tested whether diagnosing erroneous examples and then scoring them using a rubric that contained the related worked examples, a step-by-step strategy to solve a…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Science Instruction
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John M. Braxton; Nicholas MacKenzie; Alexander Liepins; Thomas J. Grites; Joan Giblin; Mounira Morris – New Directions for Student Services, 2024
This article highlights several examples of student affairs practitioners and graduate preparation faculty engaging in the scholarship of practice. In doing so, these individuals merit a designation as scholars of practice because they are conducting research using their disciplinary knowledge and skill to address an institutional problem or…
Descriptors: Student Personnel Workers, College Faculty, Scholarship, Educational Practices
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Diamond, Harvey – PRIMUS, 2023
This paper presents a series of basic computational problems that are mathematically and/or graphically appealing, and provides an idea of places one might go in trying to understand what is happening, integrating mathematics, computation, and graphics. The real point of this paper is to make a case, through those examples, for computation as an…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Computation, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study
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Carmen Smith – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
Embodied cognition theory underscores the importance of the interactions among the mind, body and environment, and instructors can make use of these connections to support learning through body-based learning activities. However, synchronous online learning presents challenges to this type of embodied pedagogy, as learning through physical actions…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Distance Education, Technology Uses in Education, Mathematics Education
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Froese, Linda; Roelle, Julian – Metacognition and Learning, 2022
Generating own examples for previously encountered new concepts is a common and highly effective learning activity, at least when the examples are of high quality. Unfortunately, however, students are not able to accurately evaluate the quality of their own examples and instructional support measures such as idea unit standards that have been…
Descriptors: College Students, Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Cognitive Development
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Tao Gong; Lan Shuai; Robert J. Mislevy – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
The usual interpretation of the person and task variables in between-persons measurement models such as item response theory (IRT) is as attributes of persons and tasks, respectively. They can be viewed instead as ensemble descriptors of patterns of interactions among persons and situations that arise from sociocognitive complex adaptive system…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Item Response Theory, Social Cognition, Individualized Instruction
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Garces, Sebastian; Vieira, Camilo; Ravai, Guity; Magana, Alejandra J. – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
Worked examples can help novice learners develop early schemata from an expert's solution to a problem. Nonetheless, the worked examples themselves are no guarantee that students will explore these experts' solutions effectively. This study explores two different approaches to supporting engineering technology students' learning in an…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Active Learning, Programming, Engineering Education
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Glinzak, Leara; Dunkelberger, Lisa – Art Therapy: Journal of the American Art Therapy Association, 2023
The Traveling Loom is an example of community-based art therapy in Grand Rapids, Michigan. It was designed to foster connections in a city that experienced social, cultural, political, religious, and socioeconomic challenges. The community-based format of The Traveling Loom provided space for interaction amongst community members, thereby helping…
Descriptors: Art Therapy, Handicrafts, Community Programs
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