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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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Anderson, Peggy L. – Journal of Reading, Writing, and Learning Disabilities International, 1989
The study compared the written expression of 56 fourth to fifth grade remedial readers and achieving readers. Significant differences favoring the achieving readers were found in three areas: productivity, syntax, and level of ideation. Remedial readers tended toward the same kinds of errors as achieving readers but with an increased frequency.…
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Error Patterns, Intermediate Grades, Reading Difficulties
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Morrow, Daniel Hibbs – Research in the Teaching of English, 1988
Proposes a method for describing the relationship between writing error and style shifting rates across communicative situations. Finds that errors diminished in proportion to the tendency of students to select grammatical features that are shared by Black American English and Standard American English in formal communicative situations. (RAE)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Black Dialects, Code Switching (Language), Error Analysis (Language)
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Shaw, Robert A.; Pelosi, Philip A. – Arithmetic Teacher, 1983
Examples of four interviews are presented to serve as sample evidence in support of more comprehensive diagnostic procedures in assessing reliably and validly the weaknessess and strengths of learners. The search for computational errors is seen to go beyond standard paper and pencil tests. (Author/MP)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Computation, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education
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Engelhardt, Jon M. – Arithmetic Teacher, 1982
Four basic types of student errors in computation are noted and described. These are: (1) mechanical, (2) careless, (3) conceptual, and (4) procedural. It is felt many teachers deal with all errors as if they were of the unhabituated procedural type, with not enough attention given to other possibilities. (MP)
Descriptors: Basic Skills, Computation, Elementary Education, Elementary School Mathematics