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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

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Azevedo, Roger – Educational Psychologist, 2015
Engagement is one of the most widely misused and overgeneralized constructs found in the educational, learning, instructional, and psychological sciences. The articles in this special issue represent a wide range of traditions and highlight several key conceptual, theoretical, methodological, and analytical issues related to defining and measuring…
Descriptors: Definitions, Learner Engagement, Science Achievement, Concept Formation
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Sandoval, William A.; Sodian, Beate; Koerber, Susanne; Wong, Jacqueline – Educational Psychologist, 2014
Science educators have long been concerned with how formal schooling contributes to learners' capacities to engage with science after school. This article frames productive engagement as fundamentally about the coordination of claims with evidence, but such coordination requires a number of reasoning capabilities to evaluate the strength of…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Science Process Skills, Competence
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Chinn, Clark A.; Samarapungavan, Ala – Educational Psychologist, 2009
This article presents a commentary on Stellan Ohlsson's (2009) theory of conceptual change by resubsumption and competitive evaluation of cognitive utility. We note two features of Ohlsson's theory that we think are particularly strong. We then argue that Ohlsson's theory explains one route to conceptual change but that there are many other routes…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Evaluation, Cognitive Psychology, Memory
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Gredler, Margaret E. – Educational Psychologist, 2009
During the late 1970s and 1980s, as interest in Lev Vygotsky's work was growing rapidly, most of his writings were unavailable in English. Translations of Vygotsky's work that reflect the breadth and depth of his thinking became available in the mid-to late 1990s. However, this work has yet to become an integral part of educational psychology.…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Concept Formation, Cognitive Development, Epistemology
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Ohlsson, Stellan – Educational Psychologist, 2009
The three commentaries on the resubsumption theory highlight three key ideas: that the term "conceptual change", as commonly used, is ambiguous between "change in the meaning of a concept" and "change in what someone believes"; that there are multiple routes to successful learning of conceptual subject matters; and that the noticing of a…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Beliefs, Evolution, Evaluation
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Ohlsson, Stellan – Educational Psychologist, 2009
Successful learning sometimes requires that the learner abandons or rejects one or more prior concepts, beliefs, or intuitive theories. Such "nonmonotonic changes" are widely believed to have a low probability of occurring spontaneously and to be difficult to promote with instruction. A theory of nonmonotonic cognitive change should explain both…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Cognitive Processes, Change, Concept Formation
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Shtulman, Andrew – Educational Psychologist, 2009
Why is conceptual change difficult yet possible? Ohlsson (2009/this issue) proposes that the answer can be found in the dynamics of resubsumption, or the process by which a domain of experience is resubsumed under an intuitive theory originally constructed to explain some other domain of experience. Here, it is argued that conceptual change is…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Evaluation, Science Education, Scientific Concepts
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Greeno, James G.; van de Sande, Carla – Educational Psychologist, 2007
We propose a bridge between cognitive and sociocultural approaches that is anchored on the sociocultural side by distributed cognition and participation, and on the cognitive side by information structures. We interpret information structures as the contents of distributed knowing and interaction in activity systems. Conceptual understanding is…
Descriptors: Interaction, Concept Formation, Schemata (Cognition), Listening Skills
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Hallden, Ola; Haglund, Liza; Stromdahl, Helge – Educational Psychologist, 2007
Research within a constructivist approach often relies on interview data, which are used to reveal beliefs held by the interviewee or to expose conceptions or conceptual structures that are supposed to reside within the interviewee. From a sociocultural perspective, severe criticism has been leveled against the neglect of the problems of inferring…
Descriptors: Sociocultural Patterns, Inferences, Concept Formation, Interviews
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Vosniadou, Stella – Educational Psychologist, 2007
In this article we argue that both the cognitive and situative perspectives need to be modified to account for the empirical evidence on learning, taking as a central example the problem of knowledge transfer. Our proposal is that we need an approach that takes as a unit of analysis the individual in a constructive interaction with the world…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Methods, Discussion, Intentional Learning
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Murphy, P. Karen – Educational Psychologist, 2007
Sociocultural and cognitive perspectives hold to epistemically different views on knowledge acquisition and change. While sociocultural perspectives point to social experience as the principal source of knowledge, cognitive perspectives emphasize the importance of the individual mind and reasoning as the primary source of knowledge. Herein, I…
Descriptors: Social Experience, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension
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Sinatra, Gale M. – Educational Psychologist, 2005
This article explores the legacy of Paul Pintrich in regard to theory and research in conceptual change. Specifically, this article reviews his vision for a view of conceptual change--a vision that integrated motivation and affect within a broader view of cognition in the classroom (Pintrich, 1999; Pintrich & Sinatra, 2003). This article describes…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Cognitive Processes, Student Motivation, Educational Psychology
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Hofer, Barbara K. – Educational Psychologist, 2004
Personal epistemology has typically been conceptualized in one of two primary ways: as a cognitive developmental process or as a system of beliefs. The approach that is elaborated here is to conceive of epistemological understanding as a metacognitive process that activates epistemic theories, a multidimensional set of interrelated beliefs about…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Online Searching, Epistemology, Metacognition