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Gabriele Steuer; Alyssa L. Grecu; Julia Mori – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2025
Background: Dealing with errors in the classroom is a crucial aspect of instructional quality and has multiple consequences for students' own dealing with errors, their learning and their achievement. The available literature on error climate indicates a paucity of research on the effects of perceived error climate on social aspects such as…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Educational Environment, Teacher Student Relationship, Alienation
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Gregory D. Keating – Language Learning, 2025
For Spanish nouns, masculine gender is unmarked and feminine is marked. Effects of markedness on gender agreement processing are inconsistent, possibly owing to differences between online methods. This study presents a reanalysis of eye-tracking data from Keating's (2022) study on the processing of noun-adjective gender agreement in speakers of…
Descriptors: Spanish, Morphology (Languages), Form Classes (Languages), Native Language
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Jessica R. Toste; Sally K. Fluhler; Emily A. Farris; Brennan W. Chandler – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2025
Students with reading disabilities require instruction and intensive intervention targeted to their current learning needs. Through data-based instruction, educators can monitor student's performance and make adjustments to instruction to better address student needs using both progress monitoring and diagnostic assessment. This article provides…
Descriptors: Reading Fluency, Reading Difficulties, Students with Disabilities, Intervention
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Amedeo Pachera; Stefania Dumbrava; Angela Bonifati; Andrea Mauri – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2025
Query languages are the foundations of database teaching and education practices. The broad adoption of graph databases contrasts with the limited research into how they are taught. Contrary to relational databases, graph databases allow navigational queries with higher expressivity and lack an a priori schema. In this article, we design a…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Graphs, Programming Languages, Databases
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Yasseen Rabab’ah – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: It is an urgent necessity to identify geometric conceptual errors among students at different levels. These errors cannot be ignored, as they hinder the learning of related concepts. Teachers need to be aware of these errors, which are often embedded in students' cognitive structures, so that they can work on eliminating them…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Error Patterns, Mathematics Instruction, Concept Formation
Tomás Larroucau; Ignacio A. Rios; Anaïs Fabre; Christopher Neilson – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2025
We examine whether large-scale information interventions can improve college application outcomes in a centralized admissions system. Using nationwide surveys from Chile, we document widespread information frictions and frequent application mistakes, such as omitting attainable preferred programs or failing to include safety options. To address…
Descriptors: College Applicants, College Admission, Intervention, Error Patterns
Douglas O. Staiger; Thomas J. Kane; Brian D. Johnson – National Bureau of Economic Research, 2025
Non-experimental value-added models have been shown to yield forecast-unbiased estimates of teacher and school effects. To investigate, we propose a dynamic state-space model of knowledge accumulation, in which test scores are imperfect measures of knowledge, and students receive temporary and persistent shocks to their stock of knowledge each…
Descriptors: Value Added Models, Teacher Effectiveness, Scores, Error of Measurement
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John P. Papadouris; Vassilis Komis; Konstantinos Lavidas – Mathematics Education Research Journal, 2025
Although absolute value is of interest to mathematics teaching researchers, since many students face problems with it, there does not seem to be an integrated record of students' errors. The present study attempts to conduct a systematic review to identify and categorize errors and misconceptions of secondary school students aged 12-18 concerning…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Misconceptions, Secondary School Students, Secondary School Mathematics
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Mariana Alvidrez; Nicole Louie; Mourat Tchoshanov – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2024
This interpretive cross-case study investigates complexity in the ways teachers frame mistakes and the reasons behind their framing, challenging the assumption in the literature that productive beliefs about errors generate productive error-handling practices, while unproductive beliefs result in unproductive practices. The study draws on…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Error Patterns
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Ori Ossmy; Danyang Han; Patrick MacAlpine; Justine Hoch; Peter Stone; Karen E. Adolph – Developmental Science, 2024
What is the optimal penalty for errors in infant skill learning? Behavioral analyses indicate that errors are frequent but trivial as infants acquire foundational skills. In learning to walk, for example, falling is commonplace but appears to incur only a negligible penalty. Behavioral data, however, cannot reveal whether a low penalty for falling…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Robotics, Error Patterns, Infants
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Julie Y. L. Chow; Jessica C. Lee; Peter F. Lovibond – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
People often rely on the covariation between events to infer causality. However, covariation between cues and outcomes may change over time. In the associative learning literature, extinction provides a model to study updating of causal beliefs when a previously established relationship no longer holds. Prediction error theories can explain both…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Learning Processes, Foreign Countries, Attribution Theory
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Alrik Thiem; Lusine Mkrtchyan – Field Methods, 2024
Qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) is an empirical research method that has gained some popularity in the social sciences. At the same time, the literature has long been convinced that QCA is prone to committing causal fallacies when confronted with non-causal data. More specifically, beyond a certain case-to-factor ratio, the method is…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Comparative Analysis, Research Methodology, Benchmarking
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Lang Chen; Jin Liu; Julia Boram Kang; Miriam Rosenberg-Lee; Daniel A. Abrams; Vinod Menon – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Emerging research suggests that episodic memory challenges are commonly encountered by autistic individuals; however, the specific nature of these memory challenges remains elusive. Here, we address critical gaps in the literature by examining pattern separation memory, the ability to store distinct memories of similar stimuli, and its links to…
Descriptors: Memory, Children, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Interests
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Jana Spear; Maria Tulis; Markus Dresel – Educational Psychology, 2024
Adaptive action-related reactions to errors, i.e. (meta-)cognitive processes and behaviours directly aimed at overcoming an error, have been proposed to benefit learning outcomes. However, causally interpretable findings are sparse in the current literature. Addressing this research deficit, the present study aimed at investigating whether…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Error Correction, Student Reaction, Undergraduate Students
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Kaitlyn E. May; Jason Scofield – Journal of Child Language, 2024
Sentences that have more than one possible meaning are said to be syntactically ambiguous (SA). Because the correct interpretation of these sentences can be unclear, resolving SA sentences can be cognitively demanding for children, particularly with regards to inhibitory control (IC). In this study we provide three lines of evidence supporting the…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Error Patterns, Syntax, Ambiguity (Semantics)
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