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Boyle, Justin D.; Kaiser, Sarah B. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2017
All students should be provided with opportunities to develop conceptual understanding prior to procedural fluency. To develop students' conceptual understanding, teachers must learn such skills as how to select, plan, and enact cognitively demanding tasks (CDT) and to evaluate evidence of student learning. Therefore, teachers need opportunities…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Skill Development
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Ingram, Matthew J.; Crane, Simeon; Mokree, Alan; Curdy, Marion E.; Patel, Bhavik A. – School Science Review, 2017
This article explores the use of pre-recorded video mini-lectures to support and enhance traditional face-to-face lectures for undergraduate students. Mini-lectures guide students through key concepts so that they can understand and assimilate key content before attending lectures.
Descriptors: Video Technology, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Lecture Method
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Darabi, Aubteen; Arrastia-Lloyd, Meagan C.; Nelson, David W.; Liang, Xinya; Farrell, Jennifer – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2015
In order to develop an expert-like mental model of complex systems, causal reasoning is essential. This study examines the differences between forward and backward instructional strategies in terms of efficiency, students' learning and progression of their mental models of the electronic transport chain in an undergraduate metabolism course…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Undergraduate Students
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Lewis, Rebecca M.; Gibbons, Lynsey K.; Kazemi, Elham; Lind, Teresa – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2015
Supporting students to develop an understanding of the meaning of fractions is an important goal of elementary school mathematics. This involves developing partitioning strategies, creating representations, naming fractional quantities, and using symbolic notation. This article describes how teachers can use a formative assessment problem to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Concepts, Formative Evaluation
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McCrudden, Matthew T.; Kendeou, Panayiota – Journal of Research in Reading, 2014
The purpose of this exploratory study was to investigate the cognitive processes used by individuals who read a refutational text about physics and demonstrated conceptual change learning. Four high school readers whose initial conceptions differed from the scientific conception of Newton's first law thought aloud while reading a refutational…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Physics, High School Students, Interviews
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Phillips, B. Allyson; Conners, Frances A.; Merrill, Edward; Klinger, Mark R. – American Journal on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 2014
Rule-based category learning was examined in youths with Down syndrome (DS), youths with intellectual disability (ID), and typically developing (TD) youths. Two tasks measured category learning: the Modified Card Sort task (MCST) and the Concept Formation test of the Woodcock-Johnson-III (Woodcock, McGrew, & Mather, 2001). In regression-based…
Descriptors: Down Syndrome, Mental Retardation, Youth, Comparative Analysis
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Jones, Steven R. – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 2013
Researchers are currently investigating how calculus students understand the basic concepts of first-year calculus, including the integral. However, much is still unknown regarding the "cognitive resources" (i.e., stable cognitive units that can be accessed by an individual) that students hold and draw on when thinking about the integral. This…
Descriptors: Physics, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Nagle, Courtney R.; Styers, Jodie L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2015
Although many factors affect students' mathematical activity during a lesson, the teacher's selection and implementation of tasks is arguably the most influential in determining the level of student engagement. Mathematical tasks are intended to focus students' attention on a particular mathematical concept and it is the careful developing and…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Activities, Context Effect, Mathematical Logic
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Ronda, Erlina – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2015
This paper describes five growth points in linking representations of function developed from a study of secondary school learners. Framed within the cognitivist perspective and process-object conception of function, the growth points were identified and described based on linear and quadratic function tasks learners can do and their strategies…
Descriptors: Secondary School Mathematics, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Concepts
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Rakoczy, Hannes; Bergfeld, Delia; Schwarz, Ina; Fizke, Ella – Child Development, 2015
Existing evidence suggests that children, when they first pass standard theory-of-mind tasks, still fail to understand the essential aspectuality of beliefs and other propositional attitudes: such attitudes refer to objects only under specific aspects. Oedipus, for example, believes Yocaste (his mother) is beautiful, but this does not imply that…
Descriptors: Theory of Mind, Beliefs, Young Children, Educational Experiments
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Langbeheim, Elon – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2015
The article, "Using Animations in Identifying General Chemistry Students' Misconceptions and Evaluating Their Knowledge Transfer Relating to Particle Position in Physical Changes" (Smith and Villarreal, 2015), reports that a substantial proportion of undergraduate students expressed misconceived ideas regarding the motion of particles in…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Misconceptions, Chemistry
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Maoto, Satsope; Masha, Kwena – Pythagoras, 2015
This study used participant observation to explore students' thinking when learning the concept of factorial functions. First-year university students undertaking a mathematics methodology course were asked to find the number of ways in which five people could sit around a circular table with five seats. Using grounded theory as a qualitative…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Freshmen, Cognitive Processes, Mathematics Skills
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Önal, Gökçe Ketizmen – Design and Technology Education, 2017
This study is mainly about developing an approach for fostering creativity in design education through analyzing the interactions among creative dimensions resembling spatial and organizational pattern of folding as a technique and also by the help of cognitive action of designers: workshop participants. In order to make an assessment, a case…
Descriptors: Creativity, Design, Interaction, Spatial Ability
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Michels, Kristin K.; Michels, Zachary D.; Hotchkiss, Sara C. – Natural Sciences Education, 2016
Although spatial reasoning and penetrative thinking skills are essential for many disciplines, these concepts are difficult for students to comprehend. In microscopy, traditional educational materials (i.e., photographs) are static. Conversely, video-based training methods convey dimensionality. We implemented a real-time digital video imaging…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Laboratory Equipment, Teaching Methods, Video Technology
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Kendeou, Panayiota; Braasch, Jason L. G.; Bråten, Ivar – Journal of Experimental Education, 2016
A refutation text is designed to promote conceptual change by explicitly acknowledging commonly held misconceptions about a topic, directly refuting them, and providing an accurate explanation. In this study, we determined the impact of different types of refutation texts on adolescent readers' conceptual change learning in science. Specifically,…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Concept Formation, Change, Learning
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