Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 5 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 42 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 157 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 650 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Hwang, Gwo-Jen | 9 |
| Blaschke, Charles | 5 |
| Huang, Yueh-Min | 5 |
| AMRAM, FRED M. | 4 |
| GIESE, DAVID L. | 4 |
| Hazlett, Denise | 4 |
| Levin, Lennart | 4 |
| Oskarsson, Mats | 4 |
| Polcyn, Kenneth A. | 4 |
| Bockman, John F. | 3 |
| Brizuela, Bárbara M. | 3 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Location
| California | 29 |
| Taiwan | 26 |
| United Kingdom (England) | 22 |
| Germany | 20 |
| China | 17 |
| Canada | 16 |
| United States | 16 |
| Australia | 15 |
| Japan | 15 |
| Pennsylvania | 15 |
| Florida | 13 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 2 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 2 |
| Does not meet standards | 1 |
Jacobson, Miriam R. – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Understanding how evaluation audiences perceive credibility can help evaluators design evaluations and reports that support appropriate use. While researchers have studied credibility assessment among various educational stakeholders, little research has been conducted with the broader public. This study explored potential factors affecting the…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Credibility, Educational Assessment, Institutional Evaluation
Wanzel, Stella K.; Schultze, Thomas; Schulz-Hardt, Stefan – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2017
When advice comes from interdependent sources (e.g., from advisors who use the same database), less information should be gained as compared to independent advice. On the other hand, since individuals strive for consistency, they should be more confident in consistent compared to conflicting advice, and interdependent advice should be more…
Descriptors: Counselors, Judges, Accuracy, Reliability
Richardson, John T. – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2015
Marton and Säljö ("Br J Educ Psychol" 46:4-11, 1976a) described deep-level and surface-level processing in experiments in which students read and recalled academic texts. They did not discuss whether levels of processing had any counterparts in students' everyday studies. However, their article is often credited as the source of the…
Descriptors: Educational Experiments, Phenomenology, Learning Processes, Learning Theories
Fienup, Daniel M.; Wright, Nicole A.; Fields, Lanny – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2015
Two experiments evaluated the effects of the simple-to-complex and simultaneous training protocols on the formation of academically relevant equivalence classes. The simple-to-complex protocol intersperses derived relations probes with training baseline relations. The simultaneous protocol conducts all training trials and test trials in separate…
Descriptors: College Students, Protocol Analysis, Educational Experiments, Anatomy
Gilliland, Betsy – L2 Journal, 2018
Ivan (pseudonym), the son of Mexican migrant farmworkers, rarely spent more than six months in the same school and by high school was still classified as an English language learner. This article traces Ivan's experiences as a language learner and writer, telling his story in his own words through his writing and ethnographic data collected during…
Descriptors: Migrant Children, Literacy, English Language Learners, Mexican American Education
Motz, Benjamin A.; Carvalho, Paulo F.; de Leeuw, Joshua R.; Goldstone, Robert L. – Journal of Learning Analytics, 2018
To identify the ways teachers and educational systems can improve learning, researchers need to make causal inferences. Analyses of existing datasets play an important role in detecting causal patterns, but conducting experiments also plays an indispensable role in this research. In this article, we advocate for experiments to be embedded in real…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Statistical Inference, Inferences, Educational Experiments
Luo, Linlin; Kiewra, Kenneth A.; Samuelson, Lydia – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2016
Note taking has been categorized as a two-stage process: the recording of notes and the review of notes. We contend that note taking might best involve a three-stage process where the missing stage is revision. This study investigated the benefits of revising lecture notes and addressed two questions: First, is revision more effective than…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Notetaking, Revision (Written Composition), Educational Experiments
Song, Donglei; Ju, Ping; Xu, Hao – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2017
Many gamification designs in education do effectively mobilize students to some extent. Yet, there is still very little research to account for the specific influence on each student. It is essential to determine whether the students can be engaged by gamification in terms of various psychological factors. In this paper, the game element point was…
Descriptors: College Students, Educational Games, Games, Learner Engagement
Rumbaugh, Christopher M.; Landau, Joshua D. – Reading Psychology, 2018
Two experiments assessed how reading aloud versus reading silently would benefit recognition and recall performance of content-specific vocabulary (i.e., the production effect). Participants studied 30 terms from an American history curriculum by reading half of the vocabulary aloud, while the remaining words were read silently. After a brief…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Reading Aloud to Others, Oral Reading, Silent Reading
Wiese, Eliane S.; Koedinger, Kenneth R. – International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education, 2017
This paper proposes "grounded feedback" as a way to provide implicit verification when students are working with a novel representation. In grounded feedback, students' responses are in the target, to-be-learned representation, and those responses are reflected in a more-accessible linked representation that is intrinsic to the domain.…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Feedback (Response), Evaluation Criteria, Instructional Effectiveness
Whang, James Doh Yeon – ProQuest LLC, 2017
Recoverability refers to the ease of recovering the underlying form--stored mental representations--given a surface form--actual, variable output signals s (e.g., [Daet^, Daet[superscript h] ] ? /Daet/ "that"). Recovery can be achieved from phonetic cues explicitly present in the acoustic signal or through prediction from the context.…
Descriptors: Predictive Validity, Predictor Variables, Phonology, Phonological Awareness
Slavin, Robert E. – Educational Psychologist, 2020
Evidence-based reform in education refers to policies that enable or encourage the use of programs and practices proven to be effective in rigorous research. This article discusses the increasing role of evidence in educational policy, rapid growth in availability of proven approaches, and development of reviews of research to summarize the…
Descriptors: Evidence Based Practice, Educational Change, Educational Research, Educational Practices
Klapproth, Florian; Kärchner, Henrike; Glock, Sabine – Journal of Experimental Education, 2018
The results of two experiments demonstrate that preservice teachers made biased school-placement recommendations depending on student's ethnicity, which on average penalized students from an ethnic minority. Moreover, additional information that was supposed to disconfirm ethnic stereotypes (religious affiliation in Experiment 1, number of missed…
Descriptors: Religion, Beliefs, Preservice Teachers, Ethnicity
Luck, Kally M.; Lerman, Dorothea C.; Wu, Wai-Ling; Dupuis, Danielle L.; Hussein, Louisa A. – Journal of Behavioral Education, 2018
We compared the effectiveness of and preference for different feedback strategies when training six special education teachers during a 5-day summer training program. In Experiment 1, teachers received written or vocal feedback while learning to implement two different types of preference assessments. In Experiment 2, we compared either written or…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Feedback (Response), Video Technology, Verbal Communication
Rousu, Matthew C.; Corrigan, Jay R.; Harris, David; Hayter, Jill K.; Houser, Scott; Lafrancois, Becky A.; Onafowora, Olugbenga; Colson, Gregory; Hoffer, Adam – Journal of Economic Education, 2015
Using 641 principles of economics students across four universities, the authors examine whether providing monetary incentives in a prisoner's dilemma game enhances student learning as measured by a set of common exam questions. Subjects either play a two-player prisoner's dilemma game for real money, play the same game with no money at stake…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Incentives, Educational Experiments, College Students

Direct link
Peer reviewed
