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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

Showing 1 to 15 of 34 results
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Robinson, Daniel H.; Levin, Joel R. – Educational Psychology Review, 2013
We appreciate the thoughtful reactions of our colleagues to the "no prescriptives, please" proposal of Robinson et al. (2013), as well as the opportunity to respond to them. For the most part, our colleagues seem to agree that a problem exists in terms of unwarranted recommendations for practice appearing too often in educational…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Periodicals, Educational Practices, Theory Practice Relationship
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Robinson, Daniel H.; Levin, Joel R.; Schraw, Gregory; Patall, Erika A.; Hunt, Earl B. – Educational Psychology Review, 2013
To counteract what we see as a growing research-reporting concern, we propose the following editorial-policy change regarding the content of primary research articles in educational research journals: Contributors should restrict their discussion and conclusions to their data and not offer recommendations for educational practice nor speculate…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Journal Articles, Educational Research, Periodicals
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Reinhart, Alyssa L.; Haring, Samuel H.; Levin, Joel R.; Patall, Erika A.; Robinson, Daniel H. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2013
Two previous studies examining 5 empirical educational psychology research journals (Hsieh et al., 2005; Robinson, Levin, Thomas, Pituch, & Vaughn, 2007) found that in the 21-year period from 1983 to 2004, there was a decrease in intervention and randomized experimental research, whereas in the 10-year period from 1994 to 2004, there was an…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Educational Psychology, Educational Researchers, Educational Research
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Marley, Scott C.; Levin, Joel R. – Educational Psychology Review, 2011
A prescriptive statement is a recommendation that, if a course of action is taken, then a desirable outcome will likely occur. For example, in reading research recommending that teachers apply an intervention targeted at a specific reading skill to improve children's reading performance is a prescriptive statement. In our view, these statements…
Descriptors: Medical Research, Intervention, Reading Research, Credibility
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Shaw, Shana M.; Walls, Stephen M.; Dacy, Breana Sylvester; Levin, Joel R.; Robinson, Daniel H. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2010
Robinson, Levin, Thomas, Pituch, and Vaughn (2007) examined 74 articles reporting nonintervention studies (i.e., studies with no researcher-manipulated variables) that appeared in 5 educational journals in 1994. Of these articles, 22 contained prescriptive statements (e.g., if teachers or students did X, then student outcome Y would result). In…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Journal Articles, Repetition, Language Usage
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Marley, Scott C.; Levin, Joel R.; Glenberg, Arthur M. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2007
The primary purpose of the present study was to determine whether recent findings documenting the benefits of text-related motor activity on young children's memory for reading passages [Glenberg, A. M., Gutierrez, T., Levin, J. R., Japuntich, S., & Kaschak, M. (2004). Activity and imagined activity can enhance young readers' reading…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Toys, Memory, Learning Problems
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Glenberg, Arthur M.; Brown, Megan; Levin, Joel R. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2007
Having young readers manipulate objects to correspond to the characters and actions in a text greatly enhances comprehension as measured by both recall and inference tests. As a step toward classroom implementation, we applied this manipulation strategy in small (three-child) reading groups. For successive critical sentences, one child would read…
Descriptors: Sentences, Reading Comprehension, Elementary Education, Children
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Hsieh, Peggy (Pei-Hsuan); Acee, Taylor; Chung, Wen-Hung; Hsieh, Ya-Ping; Kim, Hyunjin; Thomas, Greg D.; You, Ji-in; Levin, Joel R.; Robinson, Daniel H. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2005
In this article, the authors examined intervention studies that appeared in four educational psychology journals (Cognition & Instruction, Contemporary Educational Psychology, Journal of Educational Psychology, Journal of Experimental Education) and the American Educational Research Journal (AERJ) in 1983 and from 1995 to 2004. The majority of…
Descriptors: Educational Psychology, Periodicals, Intervention, Educational Research
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Glenberg, Arthur M.; Gutierrez, Tiana; Levin, Joel R.; Japuntich, Sandra; Kaschak, Michael P. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
The Indexical Hypothesis suggests a new method for enhancing children's reading comprehension. Young readers may not consistently "index," or map, words to the objects the words represent. Consequently, these readers fail to derive much meaning from the text. The instructional method involves manipulating toy objects referred to in the text (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Teaching Methods, Reading Comprehension, Indexing
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Rummel, Nikol; Levin, Joel R.; Woodward, Michelle M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2003
In 2 experiments, college students read a historical passage on aspects of human intelligence. Students were randomly assigned to 2 different instructional conditions to process the passage, mnemonic and free study. Mnemonic participants remembered more names and contributions than did free-study participants. Findings illustrate that mnemonic…
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Learning Strategies, Memorization
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Robinson, Daniel H.; Levin, Joel R.; O'Ryan, Leslie; Halbur-Ramseyer, Duane – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2001
In three experiments, the authors investigated whether statistical language influences readers' interpretations of research results. Although the authors argue that "significant" language changes should not be mandated for quantitative research studies in scientific journals, if such changes are mandated, then use of the term "statistical" is…
Descriptors: Bias, Communication (Thought Transfer), Data Interpretation, Individual Differences
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Carney, Russell N.; Levin, Joel R. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2000
Examines mnemonic transfer in the form of knowledge generalization in the context of an artwork-learning task. Results reveal that mnemonic instruction produced memory benefits on a direct test, and that on a transfer task, mnemonic students who were directed to focus on the general style of the artist outperformed students who focused on details…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Generalization, Higher Education, Learning Strategies
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Jones, Melanie S.; Levin, Mary E.; Levin, Joel R.; Beitzel, Brian D. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2000
One hundred sixth-graders studied a list of new vocabulary items according to either a semantic-context or mnemonic learning strategy, combined with either an individual or pair format for studying and testing. Results indicate that when a scripted learning pair-learning/testing format was incorporated, vocabulary learning benefits were observed…
Descriptors: Context Clues, Grade 6, Group Activities, Learning Strategies
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Levin, Joel R.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1974
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Style, Elementary School Students, Individual Differences
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Dunham, Trudy C.; Levin, Joel R. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1979
Kindergarten and first-grade children listened to a narrative passage under one of five experimental conditions. Prelearning imagery instructions did not facilitate subsequent recall of story information. Similarly intermittently provided pictures did not produce recall gains for unpictured story information, but had a positive effect on recall of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Strategies, Learning Processes, Pictorial Stimuli
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