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Carter, Scott; Cooper, Matthew; Adcock, John; Branham, Stacy – Education and Information Technologies, 2014
Video tends to be imbalanced as a medium. Typically, content creators invest enormous effort creating work that is then watched passively. However, learning tasks require that users not only consume video but also engage, interact with, and repurpose content. Furthermore, to promote learning across domains where content creators are not…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Interviews, Technology Uses in Education, Interaction
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Friedrich, Daniel – Education Policy Analysis Archives, 2014
The proliferation of boot-camp-style routes to teacher certification in the last two decades is seen by many university-based teacher educators as the result of the advancement of conservative interests aimed at de-professionalizing teaching. This essay argues that this view only accounts for one piece of the answer, the other one being that some…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Alternative Teacher Certification, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Educational Psychology
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Gray, Ron – Science Education, 2014
Inquiry experiences in secondary science classrooms are heavily weighted toward experimentation. We know, however, that many fields of science (e.g., evolutionary biology, cosmology, and paleontology), while they may utilize experiments, are not justified by experimental methodologies. With the focus on experimentation in schools, these fields of…
Descriptors: Science Education, Secondary School Students, Experiments, Inquiry
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Cable, John – Science & Education, 2014
This article offers a new interpretation of Piaget's decanting experiments, employing the mathematical notion of equivalence instead of conservation. Some reference is made to Piaget's theories and to his educational legacy, but the focus in on certain of the experiments. The key to the new analysis is the abstraction principle, which…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Experiments, Philosophy
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Csibra, Gergely; Hernik, Mikolaj; Mascaro, Olivier; Tatone, Denis; Lengyel, Máté – Developmental Psychology, 2016
Looking times (LTs) are frequently measured in empirical research on infant cognition. We analyzed the statistical distribution of LTs across participants to develop recommendations for their treatment in infancy research. Our analyses focused on a common within-subject experimental design, in which longer looking to novel or unexpected stimuli is…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Time, Statistical Distributions, Infants
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Tsui, Angeline Sin Mei; Ma, Yuen Ki; Ho, Anna; Chow, Hiu Mei; Tseng, Chia-huei – Developmental Science, 2016
Extracting general rules from specific examples is important, as we must face the same challenge displayed in various formats. Previous studies have found that bimodal presentation of grammar-like rules (e.g. ABA) enhanced 5-month-olds' capacity to acquire a rule that infants failed to learn when the rule was presented with visual presentation of…
Descriptors: Infants, Language Acquisition, Learning Processes, Grammar
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Deutsch, Avital – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2016
In the present study we investigated to what extent the morphological facilitation effect induced by the derivational root morpheme in Hebrew is independent of semantic meaning and grammatical information of the part of speech involved. Using the picture-word interference paradigm with auditorily presented distractors, Experiment 1 compared the…
Descriptors: Semitic Languages, Morphology (Languages), Semantics, Morphemes
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Kammerer, Yvonne; Kalbfell, Eva; Gerjets, Peter – Discourse Processes: A multidisciplinary journal, 2016
In two experiments we systematically examined whether contradictions between two web pages--of which one was commercially biased as stated in an "about us" section--stimulated university students' consideration of source information both during and after reading. In Experiment 1 "about us" information of the web pages was…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Bias, Web Sites, Experiments
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Fisher, Matthew; Keil, Frank C. – Cognitive Science, 2016
Does expertise within a domain of knowledge predict accurate self-assessment of the ability to explain topics in that domain? We find that expertise increases confidence in the ability to explain a wide variety of phenomena. However, this confidence is unwarranted; after actually offering full explanations, people are surprised by the limitations…
Descriptors: Expertise, Error Patterns, Predictor Variables, Accuracy
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Estrada, Fernando; Rigali-Oiler, Marybeth – International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling, 2016
Using a scenario-based analogue experiment embedded within an online survey, 174 masters-level counseling students located at a university on the Southwest Coast of the United States provided data to test the notion that the teaching alliance--a framework for enhancing the quality of the student-instructor relationship--is (a) important in…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Counselor Training, Teacher Student Relationship, Educational Quality
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Rawson, Katherine A.; Dunlosky, John – Educational Psychology Review, 2016
Declarative concepts (i.e., key terms and corresponding definitions for abstract concepts) represent foundational knowledge that students learn in many content domains. Thus, investigating techniques to enhance concept learning is of critical importance. Various theoretical accounts support the expectation that example generation will serve this…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Concept Formation, Experiments, Learning Processes
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Sachser, Ricardo Marcelo; Crestani, Ana Paula; Quillfeldt, Jorge Alberto; e Souza, Tadeu Mello; de Oliveira Alvares, Lucas – Learning & Memory, 2015
Despite the fact that the cannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB1R) plays a pivotal role in emotional memory processing in different regions of the brain, its function in the retrosplenial cortex (RSC) remains unknown. Here, using contextual fear conditioning in rats, we showed that a post-training intra-RSC infusion of the CB1R antagonist AM251…
Descriptors: Genetics, Cognitive Processes, Brain, Memory
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Lassonde, Karla A. – Discourse Processes: A multidisciplinary journal, 2015
Four experiments were designed to assess the presence and impact of stereotypical knowledge through an implicit measure of reading comprehension. In Experiments 1 and 3, participants read passages about protagonists in scenarios in which stereotypical knowledge was likely to become activated in memory. Following the descriptions, reading times for…
Descriptors: Reading Comprehension, Stereotypes, Experiments, Sentences
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Liu, Shiyu – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2015
This research investigates the role of virtual experiments and worked examples in the learning of the control of variable strategy (CVS). Sixty-nine seventh-grade students participated in this study over a span of 6 weeks and were engaged in worked example learning and/or virtual experimentation to study the knowledge and procedures associated…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Computer Simulation, Experiments, Research Methodology
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Hadad, Bat-Sheva; Ziv, Yair – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2015
We first demonstrated analytic processing in ASD under conditions in which integral processing seems mandatory in TD observers, a pattern that is often taken to indicate a local default processing in ASD. However, this processing bias does not inevitably come at the price of impaired integration skills. Indeed, examining the same group of…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Cognitive Processes, Thinking Skills
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