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Showing 1 to 15 of 41 results Save | Export
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Zonghua Shi; Jennifer Shearon; Elena M. Kaufman; Andy Y. Lu; Alexis M. Suarez; Natalie M. Rogler; Miranda R. Miller; Emily R. Cohen-Shikora – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2025
The Illusory Truth Effect (ITE) is a cognitive bias wherein participants rate repeated statements as more truthful relative to new statements. Although this effect may be less adaptive in our current media climate, where repeated information can circulate easily, few studies have examined how to mitigate or reduce it. In the current studies, we…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Bias, Intervention, Evaluative Thinking
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Julian F. Lohmann; Nils Machts; Jens Möller; Steffen Zitzmann – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
We propose a novel approach for modeling judgment accuracy that, for the first time, allows for simultaneously considering the rank, level, and differentiation component, the predominantly applied operationalization of teacher judgment accuracy. These components are conceptualized as latent, unobserved individual abilities. The model is introduced…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Evaluative Thinking, Accuracy, Models
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Brian J. Compton; Meng Dai; Gail D. Heyman; Kang Lee; Genyue Fu – Social Development, 2025
This research examines the developmental origins of a form of partiality that can threaten the integrity of merit-based evaluations. In each of two studies, 3- to 6-year-old children (total N = 335) rated drawings made by child artists they had never met, with the degree of identification between evaluator and artist manipulated across trials. In…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Childrens Attitudes, Freehand Drawing, Social Cognition
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Carolyn Baer; Jan M. Engelmann; Celeste Kidd – Developmental Science, 2025
We provide evidence that children sensibly integrate the judgments of different people who disagree according to their confidence. We asked children (ages 5-10 years, N = 92) to make judgments about what happened during unobserved events by relying on two informants who sometimes disagreed. Children integrated the reports of informants and formed…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Beliefs, Perspective Taking, Evaluative Thinking
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Alexis S. Smith-Flores; Gabriel J. Bonamy; Lindsey J. Powell – Child Development, 2025
Children's evaluations of empathizers were examined using vignette-based tasks (N = 159 4- to 7-year-old U.S. children, 82 girls, 52% White) between March 2023 and March 2024. Children typically evaluated empathizers positively compared to less empathic others. They rated empathic responses as more appropriate, selected empathizers as nicer, and…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Evaluative Thinking, Empathy, Young Children
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Verena Steinhof; Anna Schroeger; Roman Liepelt; Laura Sperl – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
While decades of research have deepened our understanding of time perception, the perception of (manipulated) video speed has been relatively underexplored but is gaining interest with recent technological advances. This study systematically investigated human perception of "video speed," "clip duration" and "original…
Descriptors: Time Perspective, Video Technology, Motion, Task Analysis
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Ross C. Anderson – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
Creative self-regulation (CSR) is important in facing the challenges and uncertainty of creative teaching and learning. Our understanding for how teachers develop creative self-regulation skills and knowledge for the classroom remains limited. This longitudinal case study begins to fill this gap with an in-depth investigation of one U.S. high…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Case Studies, Creativity, Self Management
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Yangyintao Zhao; Yong Liu; Attila Pásztor; Gyöngyvér Molnár – Psychology in the Schools, 2025
Critical thinking disposition (CTD) is regarded as a personal trait within critical thinking (CT), representing an individual's tendency and attitude toward actively employing CT skills (CTS). Previous research has predominantly focused on the external influencing factors of CTD, with limited exploration into CTD itself and the interactions among…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Personality Traits, Elementary School Students, Foreign Countries
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Raoul Bell; Lena Nadarevic; Laura Mieth; Axel Buchner – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
In present-day digital environments, people frequently encounter content from sources of questionable trustworthiness. Advertising is an untrustworthy source because its purpose is to persuade consumers rather than to provide impartial information. One factor known to enhance the perceived truth of advertising claims is repetition: Repeated…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Information Literacy, Critical Literacy, Credibility
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Sylvia M. Savvidou; Irene-Anna Diakidoy; Lucia Mason – Reading Research Quarterly, 2025
The present study examined how argument type (science based vs. personal case based), belief consistency (belief consistent vs. inconsistent) and reading goals (read to evaluate vs. read to learn) influence comprehension and trustworthiness evaluations for claim-conflicting multiple texts. Undergraduates read four conflicting texts about the…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Reading Processes, Persuasive Discourse, Beliefs
Nóra Réva; Melissa Mouthaan; José Manuel Torres; Jordan Hill – OECD Publishing, 2025
Building on the insights of the first two publications in the Strengthening the Impact of Education Research series, this third and final report shifts the focus from policy makers to the field, exploring the pivotal role of knowledge intermediaries. These organisations facilitate engagement with research among policy makers and practitioners,…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Research Utilization, Facilitators (Individuals), Educational Policy
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Deniz Saribas – Science & Education, 2025
Given the need to educate future critical thinkers, it is necessary to explore preschool teachers' level of argumentation about socioscientific issues in order to facilitate their use of appropriate strategies for effective argumentation in their own classrooms. To achieve this aim, it is also necessary to propose the use of a set of previously…
Descriptors: Preschool Teachers, Persuasive Discourse, Science and Society, Vignettes
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Eli Rudinow Saetnan – International Journal for Academic Development, 2025
In this brief reflection, I discuss how trust is integral to our approach to academic development. The value of engaging with an academic development programme is not only gained knowledge and skills of academic practice and increased trust in self and being trusted as an expert in return. We develop participants' trust in their own judgements and…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Expertise, Faculty Development, Evaluative Thinking
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Fabien Paillusson; Matthew Booth – Science & Education, 2025
For the past five decades, the majority of science education has adhered to a pedagogical philosophy which contends that issues in the acquisition and expression of target scientific narratives by learners stem from the existence of "incorrect beliefs" called misconceptions. According to this philosophy, misconceptions must be…
Descriptors: Science Education, Misconceptions, Teaching Methods, Student Attitudes
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Denis Dumas – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2025
How does creativity develop from a nearly ubiquitous and domain-general capacity associated with playfulness and openness to experience to a highly rarified and domain-specific ability associated with invention and innovation? In this short report, I describe creativity along two dimensions: self- and socially referenced creativity. In…
Descriptors: Creativity, Creative Development, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Creative Thinking
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