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Perkins, David N.; Salomon, Gavriel – Educational Psychologist, 2012
We synthesize ideas from the foregoing articles in this special issue and from the broader literature on transfer to explore several themes. In many ordinary life circumstances, transfer proceeds easily, but formal learning often shows much less transfer than educators would like, making failure to transfer a focus of investigation. Transfer, like…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Epistemology, Transfer of Training, Cognitive Processes
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Schwartz, Daniel L.; Chase, Catherine C.; Bransford, John D. – Educational Psychologist, 2012
Many approaches to instruction focus on helping people learn to recognize "the old in the new"--to turn what would otherwise be novel problems into familiar patterns that can be solved efficiently through the reuse of prior learning. Instruction that leads to efficient transfer is important, but it can also promote what we call "overzealous"…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Prior Learning, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
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Day, Samuel B.; Goldstone, Robert L. – Educational Psychologist, 2012
After more than 100 years of interest and study, knowledge transfer remains among the most challenging, contentious, and important issues for both psychology and education. In this article, we review and discuss many of the more important ideas and findings from the existing research and attempt to bridge this body of work with the exciting new…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Transfer of Training, Psychology, Prior Learning
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Engle, Randi A.; Lam, Diane P.; Meyer, Xenia S.; Nix, Sarah E. – Educational Psychologist, 2012
When contexts are framed expansively, students are positioned as actively contributing to larger conversations that extend across time, places, and people. A set of recent studies provides empirical evidence that the expansive framing of contexts can foster transfer. In this article, we present five potentially complementary explanations for how…
Descriptors: Evidence, Prior Learning, Educational Psychology, Models
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Lobato, Joanne – Educational Psychologist, 2012
Although any mainstream thought is subject to theoretical challenges, the challenges to the mainstream cognitive perspective on transfer have had an unfortunate divisive effect. This article takes a pragmatic view that transfer perspectives are simply designed objects (Plomp & Nieveen, 2007), which provide different information for different…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Transfer of Training, Teaching Methods, Learning Processes
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Tobias, Sigmund – Educational Psychologist, 2010
This appreciation of Wittrock's contributions to educational psychology suggests that his 1974 article describing generative learning theory was remarkably prescient. In that article Wittrock set the stage for the subsequent paradigm shift from cognitive to constructivist approaches to instruction. Furthermore, his suggestion that schools were the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Models, Educational Psychology, Psychologists
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Corno, Lyn – Educational Psychologist, 2008
New theory on adaptive teaching reflects the social dynamics of classrooms to explain what practicing teachers do to address student differences related to learning. In teaching adaptively, teachers respond to learners as they work. Teachers read student signals to diagnose needs on the fly and tap previous experience with similar learners to…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Student Diversity, Classroom Techniques, Prior Learning
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Kirschner, Paul A.; Sweller, John; Clark, Richard E. – Educational Psychologist, 2006
Evidence for the superiority of guided instruction is explained in the context of our knowledge of human cognitive architecture, expert-novice differences, and cognitive load. Although unguided or minimally guided instructional approaches are very popular and intuitively appealing, the point is made that these approaches ignore both the structures…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Teaching Methods, Cognitive Structures, Learning Processes