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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Yael Sidi; Rakefet Ackerman – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
When faced with challenging thinking tasks accompanied by a feeling of uncertainty, people often prefer to opt out (e.g., replying "I don't know", seeking advice) over giving low-confidence responses. In professions with high-stakes decisions (e.g., judges, medical practitioners), opting out is generally seen as preferable to making…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Decision Making, Metacognition, Knowledge Management
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Zheng, Lanqin; Zhong, Lu; Fan, Yunchao – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
Online collaborative learning (OCL) has been a mainstream pedagogy in the field of higher education. However, learners often produce off-topic information and engage less during online collaborative learning compared to other approaches. In addition, learners often cannot converge in knowledge, and they often do not know how to coregulate with…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Cooperative Learning, Undergraduate Students, Learning Analytics
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Hameed, Irfan; Haq, Mirza A.; Khan, Najmonnisa; Zainab, Bibi – On the Horizon, 2022
Purpose: Social media has shown a substantial influence on the daily lives of students, mainly due to the overuse of smartphones. Students use social media both for academic and non-academic purposes. Due to an increase in the usage of social media, academicians are now confronting pedagogical issues, and the question arises as to whether the use…
Descriptors: Social Media, Use Studies, Academic Achievement, Cognitive Processes
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Plass, Jan L.; Kalyuga, Slava – Educational Psychology Review, 2019
We discuss four ways in which emotion may relate to cognitive load during learning. One perspective describes emotions as extraneous cognitive load, competing for the limited resources of working memory by requiring the processing of task-extra or task-irrelevant information. Another perspective shows that encoding, storage, and retrieval of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Emotional Response, Self Control
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Eitel, Alexander; Endres, Tino; Renkl, Alexander – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
The main goals of this paper are to exemplify and further elaborate on the theoretical connections between cognitive load and self-regulated learning. In an effort to achieve this, we integrate the concepts of self-control and self-management within the effort monitoring and regulation (EMR) framework laid out by de Bruin et al. (Educational…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Self Management, Self Control
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Blissett, Sarah; Sibbald, Matthew; Kok, Ellen; van Merrienboer, Jeroen – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2018
Accurate self-regulation of performance is important for trainees. Trainees rely on cues to make monitoring judgments to self-regulate their performance. Ideally, cues and monitoring judgements accurately reflect performance, as measured by cue diagnosticity (the ability of a cue to predict performance) and monitoring accuracy (the ability of a…
Descriptors: Self Control, Cues, Accuracy, Cognitive Processes
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Jalalvand, Mojtaba; Bahram, Abbas; Daneshfar, Afkham; Arsham, Saeed – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2019
Purpose: This study aimed to examine the effect of gradual self-control of task difficulty and feedback on accuracy and movement pattern of the golf putting sport skill. Method: Sixty students were quasi-randomly assigned to four groups under a varying combination of the two factors of task difficulty control (self-controlled or yoked) and…
Descriptors: Task Analysis, Athletics, Psychomotor Skills, Feedback (Response)
Spanna, Catherine A.; Shute, Valerie J.; Rahimi, Seyedahmad; D'Mello, Sidney K. – Grantee Submission, 2019
We conducted an exploratory study on affect regulation during game-based learning where 110 college-aged participants (M[subscript age] = 22.14, SD[subscript age] = 1.24; 50.0% female; 70.0% White) played an easy, medium, and difficult level of an educational game (Physics Playground) while self-reporting their strongest affective state and…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Affective Behavior, Psychological Patterns, Educational Games
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Schwonke, Rolf – Educational Technology & Society, 2015
Instructional design theories such as the "cognitive load theory" (CLT) or the "cognitive theory of multimedia learning" (CTML) explain learning difficulties in (computer-based) learning usually as a result of design deficiencies that hinder effective schema construction. However, learners often struggle even in well-designed…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Metacognition, Self Control
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Murayama, Kou; Blake, Adam B.; Kerr, Tyson; Castel, Alan D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2016
People are often exposed to more information than they can actually remember. Despite this frequent form of information overload, little is known about how much information people choose to remember. Using a novel "stop" paradigm, the current research examined whether and how people choose to stop receiving new--possibly…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Metacognition, Study Habits
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Chen, Bodong – Journal of Learning Analytics, 2015
In this commentary on Van Leeuwen (2015, this issue), I explore the relation between theory and practice in learning analytics. Specifically, I caution against adhering to one specific theoretical doctrine while ignoring others, suggest deeper applications of cognitive load theory to understanding teaching with analytics tools, and comment on…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Data Analysis, Theory Practice Relationship, Learning Theories
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Sage, Kara – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2014
When acquiring information from a 2D platform, self-control and/or optimal pacing may help reduce cognitive load and enhance learning outcomes. In the present research, adults viewed novel action sequences via one of four learning media: (1) self-paced slideshows, where viewers advanced through slides at their own pace by clicking a mouse, (2)…
Descriptors: Adults, Video Technology, Visual Aids, Cognitive Processes
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Sage, Kara; Rausch, Joseph; Quirk, Abigail; Halladay, Lauren – Journal of Information Technology Education: Research, 2016
The present study focused on how self-control over pace might help learners successfully extract information from digital learning aids. Past research has indicated that too much control over pace can be overwhelming, but too little control over pace can be ineffective. Within the popular self-testing domain of flashcards, we sought to elucidate…
Descriptors: Vocabulary Development, Instructional Materials, Self Control, Pacing
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Eckhardt, Marc; Urhahne, Detlef; Conrad, Olaf; Harms, Ute – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2013
The study examined the effects of two different instructional interventions as support for scientific discovery learning using computer simulations. In two well-known categories of difficulty, data interpretation and self-regulation, instructional interventions for learning with computer simulations on the topic "ecosystem water" were developed…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Cognitive Processes, Academic Support Services, Discovery Learning
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Stambaugh, Laura A. – Psychology of Music, 2013
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of cognitive load during practice on university wind students' learning. Cognitive load was manipulated through instrument family (woodwind or brass) and the amount of repetition used in practice (highly repetitive or random). University woodwind and valved-brass students (N = 46)…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Musical Instruments
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