NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 11 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Hallinen, Nicole R.; Booth, Julie L. – Grantee Submission, 2018
5th graders (n=527) were randomly assigned to self-explain worked examples (WE) or solve problems during a yearlong study. WE students learned more algebra skills when given algebra worked examples on an end-of-year transfer measure. Comparing attempts, conceptual, and mechanical correctness by condition, results demonstrated that the condition…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Transfer of Training, Algebra, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Olsen, Jennifer K.; Rummel, Nikol; Aleven, Vincent – Grantee Submission, 2015
To learn from an error, students must correct the error by engaging in sense-making activities around the error. Past work has looked at how supporting collaboration around errors affects learning. This paper attempts to shed further light on the role that collaboration can play in the process of overcoming an error. We found that good…
Descriptors: Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Cooperative Learning
de Villiers, Celéste; Hopkins, Sarah – Mathematics Education Research Group of Australasia, 2013
Counting strategies initially used by young children to perform simple addition are often replaced by more efficient counting strategies, decomposition strategies and rule-based strategies until most answers are encoded in memory and can be directly retrieved. Practice is thought to be the key to developing fluent retrieval of addition facts. This…
Descriptors: Addition, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills, Computation
Kotsonis, Miriam E.; Patterson, Charlotte J. – 1980
This study compared the comprehension monitoring skills of learning disabled (LD) and normal elementary school children. Comprehension monitoring, the ability to evaluate one's level of understanding of incoming messages, was assessed using two separate tasks. In the first (referential task), the child took the role of the listener in a…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Comprehension, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Cramer, Phebe – 1974
If older children automatically label pictorial stimuli, then their performance should be impaired on tasks in which such labeling would increase the error rate. Children were asked to learn pairs of verbal or pictorial stimuli which, when combined, formed a different compound word (BUTTER-FLY). Subsequently, a false recognition test that included…
Descriptors: Children, Cognitive Processes, Elementary School Students, Error Patterns
Lindauer, Barbara K.; Paris, Scott G. – 1975
This paper focuses on a study which replicates and extends earlier work employing a recognition memory paradigm to investigate children's memory and developmental changes in dominant word associations. On the recognition test the implicit associative response can lead to better memory for the original items (this is the hit rate), and it can also…
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Cognitive Development, Elementary School Students, Error Patterns
Vago, Stephen; Siegler, Robert S. – 1977
This paper presents a framework for conceptualizing the different ways in which instructions in experimental tasks may be misunderstood. Five possible types of misunderstandings are identified and discussed: (1) misunderstanding of a particular term in the instructions; (2) misinterpretation of a task because the instructions are difficult to…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Cognitive Tests, Developmental Psychology
LaVoie, Joseph C.; And Others – 1976
Children's self-control behavior in motor and cognitive tasks was examined in a series of two studies in which modeling and self-regulatory mechanisms were varied to assess the influence of each. In the first study, 6-, 7-, 9-, and 11-year-old children individually played a 20-trial game of 'Simon Says' (involving activation and inhibition trials)…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Development, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Elomaa, Marjatta – 1998
This study analyzed informal Finnish compositions written by the first pupils in Vaasa (Finland) who were taught Swedish by immersion method and the compositions of their parallel class. Compositions in the fourth and fifth forms were compared. The immersion pupils were taught mostly in Swedish, while their peers in the parallel group were taught…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Elementary School Students, Error Patterns, Essays
Bartlett, Elsa Jaffe – 1979
This study explores how children indicate that a new character or object is being introduced into a written text and how they tell their readers that a particular word refers to something which has appeared in the text before. In particular, the study focuses on information represented by noun phrases in written narrative texts. To investigate how…
Descriptors: Ambiguity, Communication Problems, Comparative Analysis, Context Clues
Burlbaw, Lynn M.; Price, Margaret A. – 1996
This paper analyzes "confused history" on the part of students and where that confusion might originate. The study is based on a modified form of content analysis of articles by R. Lederer. The articles offer a compilation of student errors in history and geography. Two major categories of errors are recognized: (1) Type I, represented by errors…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Elementary School Students, Elementary Secondary Education