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Showing all 6 results
Jadallah, May; Anderson, Richard C.; Nguyen-Jahiel, Kim; Miller, Brian W.; Kim, Il-Hee; Kuo, Li-Jen; Dong, Ting; Wu, Xiaoying – American Educational Research Journal, 2011
The influence of one teacher's scaffolding moves on children's performance in free-flowing child-led small-group discussions was investigated. Three moves were examined: prompting for and praising the use of evidence, asking for clarification, and challenging. Lag sequential analysis was applied to a corpus of over 5,300 speaking turns during 30…
Descriptors: Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Small Group Instruction
Peer reviewedAnderson, Richard C.; And Others – American Educational Research Journal, 1978
As predicted, foods from categories typical of most people's restaurant schemata (conceptual framework) were better recalled by undergraduates who read a restaurant narrative, than those reading about supermarkets, a less structured schemata. Findings confirm Ausubel's notion that information which fits slots in a conceptual framework is more…
Descriptors: Association (Psychology), Concept Formation, Conceptual Schemes, Connected Discourse
Peer reviewedAnderson, Richard C.; And Others – American Educational Research Journal, 1977
Thirty physical education students and 30 music education students read a passage which could be given two distinct interpretations. Multiple-choice test scores, theme-revealing disambiguations and instrusions in free recall indicate that high-level schemata provide the interpretive framework for comprehending discourse. Schema theory and its…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Concept Formation, Conceptual Schemes
Peer reviewedSpiro, Rand J.; Anderson, Richard C. – American Educational Research Journal, 1981
Ausubel asserts that his work is impugned in various ways in Anderson, Spiro, and Anderson. This paper argues that a more careful reading of the original paper obviates most of Ausubel's concerns. (Author/GK)
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Learning Theories
Peer reviewedAnderson, Richard C.; Kulhavy, Raymond W. – American Educational Research Journal, 1972
Purpose of this experiment was to explore to what extent people can acquire concepts from exposure to definitions and to determine whether a procedure that induces semantic encoding will have the same effect on concept learning as such procedures have on associative learning. (Authors/MB)
Descriptors: College Students, Concept Formation, Definitions, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedAnderson, Richard C.; Carter, John F. – American Educational Research Journal, 1972
Findings clearly demonstrate that interference theory can account for the forgetting of meaningfully-learned, connected discourse. (Authors)
Descriptors: Connected Discourse, Data Analysis, Inhibition, Interference (Language)

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