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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 22 results
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Schraw, Gregory; Kuch, Fred; Gutierrez, Antonio P.; Richmond, Aaron S. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2014
We compared 5 different statistics (i.e., G index, gamma, "d'", sensitivity, specificity) used in the social sciences and medical diagnosis literatures to assess calibration accuracy in order to examine the relationship among them and to explore whether one statistic provided a best fitting general measure of accuracy. College…
Descriptors: Statistics, Statistical Analysis, Correlation, Accuracy
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Schraw, Gregory; Patall, Erika A. – Educational Psychology Review, 2013
We draw on the evidence-based practice (EBP) literature to consider the relationship between empirical results reported in primary research journals and prescriptive recommendations for practice based on those results. We argue that the relationship between individual empirical findings and practice should be mediated by two additional steps in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Educational Research, Journal Articles, Periodicals
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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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Paik, Eugene S.; Schraw, Gregory – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2013
The illusion of understanding hypothesis asserts that, when people are learning with multimedia presentations, the addition of animation can affect metacognitive monitoring such that they perceive the presentation to be easier to understand and develop more optimistic metacomprehension. As a result, learners invest less cognitive effort when…
Descriptors: Animation, Multimedia Instruction, Expertise, Metacognition
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Magliano, Joseph P.; Schraw, Gregory – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2010
The purpose of this mixed methods study was to investigate how relevance instructions influence readers' personal reading intentions, reading goals, text processing, and memory for text. Undergraduates (n = 52) were randomly assigned to one of three pre-reading relevance instruction conditions that asked them to read from a perspective or to read…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Reading, Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes
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Schraw, Gregory; Wadkins, Theresa; Olafson, Lori – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2007
The authors conducted a grounded theory study of academic procrastination to explore adaptive and maladaptive aspects of procrastination and to help guide future empirical research. They discuss previous research on the definition and dimensionality of procrastination and describe the study in which interview data were collected in 4 stages,…
Descriptors: Models, Failure, Fear, Coping
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Schraw, Gregory; Lehman, Stephen; Poliquin, Anne – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2007
We examined the effect of studying a causal diagram on comprehension of causal relationships from an expository science text. A causal diagram is a type of visual display that explicitly represents cause-effect relationships. In Experiment 1, readers between conditions did not differ with respect to memory for main ideas, but the readers who…
Descriptors: Memory, Causal Models, Comprehension, Visual Aids
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Schraw, Gregory – Educational Psychology Review, 2007
This article reviews the role of relevance in text processing. It argues that relevance instructions provided by instructors and texts help readers identify text segments that are germane to a reading goal. A taxonomy of relevance instructions is presented and four basic types of relevance manipulations are considered (i.e., targeted segments,…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Models, Language Processing, Reading Instruction
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Lehman, Stephen; Schraw, Gregory; McCrudden, Matthew T.; Hartley, Kendall – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 2007
This study examined how seductive details affect on-line processing of a technical, scientific text. In Experiment 1, each sentence from the experimental text was rated for interest and importance. Participants rated seductive details as being more interesting but less important than main ideas. In Experiment 2, we examined the effect of seductive…
Descriptors: Science Interests, Sentences, Educational Psychology, Recall (Psychology)
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Schraw, Gregory; Kambe, Gretchen – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2005
The authors examined the effect of prereading relevance instructions on reading time and learning for 2 types of text. Experiment 1 found that relevance instructions increased learning for relevant segments without increasing reading time when reading a scientific text sentence by sentence on a computer. In contrast, the same segments were learned…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Recall (Psychology), Performance Factors, Instructional Effectiveness
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Lehman, Stephen; Schraw, Gregory – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2002
Examines the effects of coherence and relevance on shallow and deeper text processing, testing the hypothesis that enhancing the relevance of text segments compensates for breaks in local and global coherence. Results reveal that breaks in local coherence had no effect on any outcome measures, whereas relevance enhanced deeper processing.…
Descriptors: Cohesion (Written Composition), Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes, Text Structure
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Flowerday, Terri; Schraw, Gregory – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2000
Interviews 36 practicing teachers, using phenomenological methods to examine what, when, where, and to whom teachers offer choice. Final results focus on the following main points: teachers believe that choice promotes learning and motivation; choice is used in a number of ways; and teachers impose limits on classroom choice based on student age,…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Learning Strategies, Motivation Techniques, Student Characteristics
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Schraw, Gregory – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2000
Examines how transmission and transaction beliefs about reading affect comprehension, engagement, and holistic understanding of narrative texts with undergraduate college students (N=247). Transaction beliefs were related positively to the type and number of reader responses as well as to the sophistication of one's holistic interpretation.…
Descriptors: Beliefs, College Students, Higher Education, Reading Comprehension
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Schraw, Gregory – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
Three experiments involving a total of 137 undergraduates examined processing and recall differences associated with two types of seductive details, highly interesting but unimportant text segments. Context-dependent and context independent details were distinguished, with context-independent seductive details recalled better than dependent…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Reading Comprehension, Recall (Psychology)
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Schraw, Gregory; Nietfeld, John – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1998
The general monitoring skill hypothesis states that skilled adult learners monitor their comprehension using domain-general metacognitive knowledge and domain-specific knowledge. Results with 192 undergraduates indicate that monitoring skills are correlated across multiple domains and that individuals may possess separate monitoring skills for…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Cognitive Processes, Comprehension, Higher Education
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