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Sarah Bichler; Michael Sailer; Elisabeth Bauer; Jan Kiesewetter; Hanna Härtl; Martin R. Fischer; Frank Fischer – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2024
Teachers routinely observe and interpret student behavior to make judgements about whether and how to support their students' learning. Simulated cases can help pre-service teachers to gain this skill of diagnostic reasoning. With 118 pre-service teachers, we tested whether participants rate simulated cases presented in a serial-cue case format as…
Descriptors: Clinical Diagnosis, Abstract Reasoning, Simulation, Case Method (Teaching Technique)
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CadwalladerOlsker, Todd D. – Mathematics Teacher, 2011
Bayes's theorem is notorious for being a difficult topic to learn and to teach. Problems involving Bayes's theorem (either implicitly or explicitly) generally involve calculations based on two or more given probabilities and their complements. Further, a correct solution depends on students' ability to interpret the problem correctly. Most people…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Probability, Mathematical Logic, Mathematics Skills
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Fitzgerald, James T.; And Others – Evaluation and the Health Professions, 1994
Implications of case specificity in two computer-based clinical-simulation examination cases were examined by a classical measurement approach and by a Bayesian analysis of test characteristics. Results from 163 medical students indicate that such examinations cannot be used in high-stakes situations without additional research. (SLD)
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Case Method (Teaching Technique), Clinical Diagnosis, Computer Assisted Testing