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Grace Pai – Journal of Statistics and Data Science Education, 2025
Instructors are increasingly using interactive student response systems (SRS) to foster active learning and deepen student understanding in statistics education. Yet most studies focus on either the benefits of SRS or on how "students" can receive and use feedback, rather than on how "instructors" can use formative assessment…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Community College Students, Statistics Education, Active Learning
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Idit Adler; Scott Warren; Cathleen Norris; Elliot Soloway – Smart Learning Environments, 2025
Smart learning environments provide students with opportunities to engage in self-regulated learning (SRL). However, little research has examined how teachers leverage these opportunities. We employed a multiple-case study methodology to examine the SRL supporting instructional practices of five third-grade teachers as they implemented a science…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers, Grade 3, Independent Study
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Todd Whitney; Justin T. Cooper; Kate Snider – Journal of Special Education Technology, 2025
Students with disabilities are being educated in the general education setting at an ever-increasing rate; therefore, it becomes imperative that educator preparation programs ensure that pre-service teachers are equipped to meet the needs of all students. Teacher education scholars have encouraged educator preparation programs to maximize the…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Inclusion
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Jiali Song; Benjamin Wolfe – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2024
The low prevalence effect (LPE) is a cognitive limitation commonly found in visual search tasks, in which observers miss rare targets. Drivers looking for road hazards are also subject to the LPE. However, not all road hazards are equal; a paper bag floating down the road is much less dangerous than a rampaging moose. Here, we asked whether…
Descriptors: Traffic Safety, Motor Vehicles, Incidence, Identification
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Naoko Aoki – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2024
This study probed praising among preschoolers in natural settings and investigated their developmental changes. In study 1, teachers in preprimary educational facilities answered queries about the frequency and described episodes of praising among preschoolers. The results indicated that children approximately 3-year-old commonly praised friends,…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Altruism, Friendship, Student Behavior
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Ken A. Fujimoto; Carl F. Falk – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Item response theory (IRT) models are often compared with respect to predictive performance to determine the dimensionality of rating scale data. However, such model comparisons could be biased toward nested-dimensionality IRT models (e.g., the bifactor model) when comparing those models with non-nested-dimensionality IRT models (e.g., a…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Rating Scales, Predictive Measurement, Bayesian Statistics
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Tegan Little; Phillip Dawson; David Boud; Joanna Tai – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Student feedback literacy has been the subject of much conceptual literature; however, relatively little intervention research has investigated how and if it can be developed. Further, no evaluation of the current empirical literature has been conducted to assess which elements of feedback literacy can be successfully improved in practice, and…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Higher Education, College Students, Intervention
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Eman Bajamal; Ebtsam Aly Abou Hashish; Lorraine B. Robbins – Journal of School Nursing, 2024
Although enjoyment has been linked to participation in physical activity (PA), a thorough analysis of the concept is lacking. Health-related behavior research emphasizes the necessity of focusing on individual psychological requirements, such as enjoyment in PA, to boost children and adolescents' motivation for PA. The current paper is a report on…
Descriptors: Children, Adolescents, Physical Activities, Psychological Patterns
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Bahar Saberzadeh-Ardestani; Ali Reza Sima; Bardia Khosravi; Meredith Young; Sara Mortaz Hejri – Advances in Health Sciences Education, 2024
Few studies have engaged in data-driven investigations of the presence, or frequency, of what could be considered retaliatory assessor behaviour in Multi-source Feedback (MSF) systems. In this study, authors explored how assessors scored others if, before assessing others, they received their own assessment score. The authors examined assessments…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Scores, Evaluators, Behavior
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Junhuan Wei; Qin Wang; Buyun Dai; Yan Cai; Dongbo Tu – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2024
Traditional IRT and IRTree models are not appropriate for analyzing the item that simultaneously consists of multiple-choice (MC) task and constructed-response (CR) task in one item. To address this issue, this study proposed an item response tree model (called as IRTree-MR) to accommodate items that contain different response types at different…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Models, Multiple Choice Tests, Cognitive Processes
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Séverin Lions; María Paz Blanco; Pablo Dartnell; Carlos Monsalve; Gabriel Ortega; Julie Lemarié – Applied Measurement in Education, 2024
Multiple-choice items are universally used in formal education. Since they should assess learning, not test-wiseness or guesswork, they must be constructed following the highest possible standards. Hundreds of item-writing guides have provided guidelines to help test developers adopt appropriate strategies to define the distribution and sequence…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Multiple Choice Tests, Guidelines, Test Items
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Hafsteinn Einarsson; Alexandru Cernat; Natalie Shlomo – Field Methods, 2024
The presentation of survey requests represents an easily modifiable feature of survey communications that can in some contexts affect response propensities. Here, we examine how two features: the framing of the participation request (informed by prospect theory) and the inclusion of targeted appeals based on demographic background (age or…
Descriptors: Surveys, Participation, Foreign Countries, Response Rates (Questionnaires)
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Corina Jimenez-Gomez; Courtney Hannula; Ashley P. Liggett; Samuel Shvarts; Christopher A. Podlesnik – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2024
We assessed whether novel praise statements could be used to (a) maintain and increase responses with existing reinforcement histories and (b) teach a previously untaught response among children diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder across two experiments. During response-stimulus pairing, two responses resulted in preferred edibles but only one…
Descriptors: Positive Reinforcement, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Responses, Stimuli
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Jamiika Thomas; Will Fleming; Linda J. Hayes – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2024
From an operant perspective, verbal behavior is multiply controlled by different sources of stimulation, including self-stimulation. Self-stimulation (i.e., responding with respect to one's own response products) is thought to be especially important for verbal mediation that temporally extends discriminative stimulus control. While previous…
Descriptors: Stimulation, Learning Modalities, Audience Response, Verbal Stimuli
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Jillian C. Sordello; Robbie J. Hanson; Caio F. Miguel; Armando Angulo; Charles S. Dingus – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2024
In the current study, eight college students were exposed to a successive matching-to-sample (S-MTS) procedure utilizing non-verbal auditory stimuli consisting of common sounds. During emergent relations tests, participants were asked to talk aloud, and their vocal-verbal statements were transcribed and categorized as class-consistent,…
Descriptors: Verbal Communication, Task Analysis, College Students, Auditory Stimuli
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