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Brien, Robert – Programmed Learning and Educational Technology, 1983
Reviews concepts proposed by researchers in linguistics, psychology, philosophy, and artificial intelligence, who have applied their knowledge and skills to the study of human information processing--i.e., memory content, storage, encoding, and retrieval. Guidelines derived from theory for use by instructional designers and subject specialists in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Epistemology, Guidelines
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Patten, James Van; And Others – Review of Educational Research, 1986
This paper reviews instructional theory and research relating to three design criteria: (1) the order of presentation of instruction (sequencing); (2) the kinds of content relationships that should be taught; and (3) the way content relationships should be taught (synthesis). Also research on the relations between sequencing and synthesis is…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Instructional Design
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Brause, Rita S.; And Others – English Journal, 1979
Reviews research on sequences in language development and suggests ways to base instruction on each student's level of development. (DD)
Descriptors: Educational Research, English Instruction, Junior High Schools, Language Acquisition
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Shavelson, Richard J.; Maddahian, Ebrahim – 1978
This review of the literature on aptitude by treatment interaction concentrates on studies which investigated two or more instructional treatments in a quantitative subject area--primarily mathematics--with different populations of students on whom measures of individual differences in aptitude were available. Designed to formulate some tentative…
Descriptors: Aptitude, Aptitude Treatment Interaction, Bibliographies, Cognitive Ability
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Leith, G. O. M. – Educational Review, 1979
The experiments reviewed in this paper give strong reasons for concluding that the order in which things are learned, the range of exemplification of structural principles, and the introduction of a carefully judged amount of conflict may be critical to reaching an appropriate kind and level of learning. (Author/SJL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Educational Research