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Guoqian Luo; Hengnian Gu; Xiaoxiao Dong; Dongdai Zhou – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
In the realm of e-learning, supporting personalized learning effectively necessitates recommending sequences of learning items that maximize learning efficiency while minimizing cognitive load, all tailored to the learner's goals. These recommendations must account for the prerequisite relationships among learning items and the learner's…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Individualized Instruction, Sequential Learning, Learning Processes
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Laurence Romain; Petar Milin; Dagmar Divjak – Language Learning, 2025
We explore how general principles of learning apply to and combine with usage-based approaches to language learning and teaching, with a focus on the effects of order of exposure to new information in second language (L2) instruction. Although the effects of input spacing and timing on memory and learning have been previously explored (see Rogers,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
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Harsel, Milou; Hoogerheide, Vincent; Verkoeijen, Peter; Gog, Tamara – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Research suggests some sequences of examples and problems (i.e., EE, EP) are more effective (higher test performance) and efficient (attained with equal/less mental effort) than others (PP, sometimes also PE). Recent findings suggest this is due to motivational variables (i.e., self-efficacy), but did not test this during the training phase.…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Sequential Learning, Task Analysis, Time Factors (Learning)
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Middlebrooks, Catherine D.; Castel, Alan D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2018
Learners make a number of decisions when attempting to study efficiently: they must choose which information to study, for how long to study it, and whether to restudy it later. The current experiments examine whether documented impairments to self-regulated learning when studying information sequentially, as opposed to simultaneously, extend to…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Memory, Sequential Learning, Study Habits