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Boruch, Robert – New Directions for Evaluation, 2007
Thomas Jefferson recognized the value of reason and scientific experimentation in the eighteenth century. This chapter extends the idea in contemporary ways to standards that may be used to judge the ethical propriety of randomized trials and the dependability of evidence on effects of social interventions.
Descriptors: Ethics, Standards, Evaluation Methods, Research Methodology
Treiman, Rebecca; Levin, Iris; Kessler, Brett – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2007
Letter names play an important role in early literacy. Previous studies of letter name learning have examined the Latin alphabet. The current study tested learners of Hebrew, comparing their patterns of performance and types of errors with those of English learners. We analyzed letter-naming data from 645 Israeli children who had not begun formal…
Descriptors: Orthographic Symbols, Second Language Learning, Semitic Languages, Emergent Literacy
Savage, Robert; Stuart, Morag – Educational Psychology, 2006
This paper investigates the processes that predict reading acquisition. Associations between (a) scaffolding errors (e.g., "torn" misread as "town" or "tarn"), other reading errors, and later reading and (b) vowel and rime inferences and later reading were explored. To assess both of these issues, 50 6-year-old children were shown a number of CVC…
Descriptors: Rhyme, Vocabulary, Phonology, Skill Development
Anderson, Jeff – Educational Leadership, 2006
The writing teacher's foremost job is leading students to see the valuable ideas they have to express. Writing is a way to share those ideas with the world rather than a way to be wrong, Anderson asserts. Teachers and parents too often focus on errors in student writing. This focus gives students the impression that writing well is about avoiding…
Descriptors: Writing Teachers, Student Attitudes, Grammar, Writing Instruction
Richland, Lindsey E.; Morrison, Robert G.; Holyoak, Keith J. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2006
We explored how relational complexity and featural distraction, as varied in scene analogy problems, affect children's analogical reasoning performance. Results with 3- and 4-year-olds, 6- and 7-year-olds, 9- to 11-year-olds, and 13- and 14-year-olds indicate that when children can identify the critical structural relations in a scene analogy…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Error Patterns, Cognitive Development, Children
Wollack, James A. – Applied Measurement in Education, 2006
Many of the currently available statistical indexes to detect answer copying lack sufficient power at small [alpha] levels or when the amount of copying is relatively small. Furthermore, there is no one index that is uniformly best. Depending on the type or amount of copying, certain indexes are better than others. The purpose of this article was…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Item Analysis, Test Length, Sample Size
Brooks, Patricia J.; Sekerina, Irina – Language Acquisition, 2006
Errors involving universal quantification are common in contexts depicting sets of individuals in partial, one-to-one correspondence. In this article, we explore whether quantifier-spreading errors are more common with distributive quantifiers each and every than with all. In Experiments 1 and 2, 96 children (5- to 9-year-olds) viewed pairs of…
Descriptors: Children, Adults, Grammar, Error Patterns
Rastle, Kathleen; Tyler, Lorraine K.; Marslen-Wilson, William – Brain and Language, 2006
Morphological errors in reading aloud (e.g., "sexist" [right arrow] "sexy") are a central feature of the symptom-complex known as deep dyslexia, and have historically been viewed as evidence that representations at some level of the reading system are morphologically structured. However, it has been proposed (Funnell, 1987) that morphological…
Descriptors: Morphology (Languages), Dyslexia, Reading Aloud to Others, Error Analysis (Language)
Miles, T. R.; Thierry, Guillaume; Roberts, Judith; Schiffeldrin, Josie – Dyslexia, 2006
Forty-eight college students, 24 of them dyslexic, were presented with four sentences of increasing complexity. Participants were asked to repeat each sentence and a record was kept of the number of repetitions required before 100% correct accuracy was achieved. None of the 24 control participants required a total of more than eight repetitions…
Descriptors: Sentences, Dyslexia, College Students, Recall (Psychology)
Longo, Matthew R.; Bertenthal, Bennett I. – Infancy, 2006
Do 9-month-old infants motorically simulate actions they perceive others perform? Two experiments tested whether action observation, like overt reaching, is sufficient to elicit the Piagetian A-not-B error. Infants recovered a toy hidden at location A or observed an experimenter recover the toy. After the toy was hidden at location B, infants in…
Descriptors: Observation, Error Patterns, Infants, Toys
Deneault, Joane; Ricard, Marcelle – Journal of Cognition and Development, 2006
This study investigated the development of the understanding of class inclusion in children age 5, 7, and 9 years, whose performance on a qualitative class-inference task assessing their appreciation of the transitive and asymmetrical nature of inclusive relations within the animal domain was compared with their ability to make quantitative…
Descriptors: Children, Inferences, Cognitive Development, Age Differences
Steinhauser, Marco; Hubner, Ronald – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2006
The hypothesis is introduced that 1 source of shift costs is the strengthening of task-related associations occurring whenever an overt response is produced. The authors tested this account by examining shift effects following errors and error compensation processes. The authors predicted that following a specific type of error, called task…
Descriptors: Responses, Error Correction, Association (Psychology), Task Analysis
Effects of Guided Notes versus Completed Notes during Lectures on College Students' Quiz Performance
Neef, Nancy A.; McCord, Brandon E.; Ferreri, Summer J. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2006
We compared the effects of guided lecture notes versus completed lecture notes on pre- to postlecture improvements in quiz performance across two sections of a college course. The results of a counterbalanced multielement design did not reveal consistent differences between the two note formats on students' mean quiz scores. However, fewer errors…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Notetaking, Comparative Analysis, College Students
Mank, David Michael – 1985
The study employed self-monitoring and a strategy for self-solicitation of feedback to improve and maintain work performance in integrated job settings (two restaurants in Eugene, Oregon) with seven severely handicapped young adults. Self-monitoring procedures included counting and recording units of work completed and the amount of time spent…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Feedback, Job Skills, Self Control
Segal, Denise E. – 1986
A study investigated the development of children's metalinguistic understanding of the meanings of two non-ostensive words beyond the usual semantic acquisition period. The words, whose meanings cannot be associated with an object by pointing, were "pain" and "pretend". Two specific questions were addressed: What types of…
Descriptors: Child Language, Error Patterns, Language Acquisition, Language Usage