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Kapler, Irina V.; Cepeda, Nicholas J.; Weston, Tina – Education Canada, 2012
How can students' forgetting be reduced? The spacing effect--a promising strategy from the field of cognitive psychology--might hold some of the answers. Research has demonstrated that information is remembered two to three times better if study sessions are spaced in time rather than massed together. The testing effect is another research-based…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Testing, Memory, Cognitive Psychology
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Cepeda, Nicholas J.; Coburn, Noriko; Rohrer, Doug; Wixted, John T.; Mozer, Michael C,; Pashler, Harold – Online Submission, 2009
More than a century of research shows that increasing the gap between study episodes using the same material can enhance retention, yet little is known about how this so-called distributed practice effect unfolds over nontrivial periods. In two three-session laboratory studies, we examined the effects of gap on retention of foreign vocabulary,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Intervals, Educational Practices, Retention (Psychology)
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Cepeda, Nicholas J.; Vul, Edward; Rohrer, Doug; Wixted, John T.; Pashler, Harold – Online Submission, 2008
To achieve enduring retention, people must usually study information on multiple occasions. How does the timing of study events affect retention? Prior research has examined this issue only in a spotty fashion, usually with very short time intervals. To characterize spacing effects over significant durations, over 1,350 individuals were taught a…
Descriptors: Intervals, Educational Practices, Retention (Psychology), Long Term Memory
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Pashler, Harold; Rohrer, Doug; Cepeda, Nicholas J.; Carpenter, Shana K. – Online Submission, 2007
Our research on learning enhancement has been focusing on the consequences for learning and forgetting of some of the more obvious and concrete choices that arise in instruction, including: How does spacing of practice affect retention of information over significant retention intervals (up to two years)? Do spacing effects generalize beyond…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Testing, Cognitive Psychology, Intervals