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Schang, Andy; Dew, Matthew; Stump, Emily M.; Holmes, N. G.; Passante, Gina – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2023
Uncertainty is an important and fundamental concept in physics education. Students are often first exposed to uncertainty in introductory labs, expand their knowledge across lab courses, and then are introduced to quantum mechanical uncertainty in upper-division courses. This study is part of a larger project evaluating student thinking about…
Descriptors: College Students, Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking, Abstract Reasoning
Fangli Xia; Mitchell J. Nathan; Kelsey E. Schenck; Michael I. Swart – Cognitive Science, 2025
Task-relevant actions can facilitate mathematical thinking, even for complex topics, such as mathematical proof. We investigated whether such cognitive benefits also occur for action predictions. The action-cognition transduction (ACT) model posits a reciprocal relationship between movements and reasoning. Movements--imagined as well as real ones…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Geometry, Mathematical Concepts, Mathematics Instruction
Basir, Mochamad Abdul; Waluya, S. B.; Dwijanto; Isnarto – European Journal of Educational Research, 2022
Cognitive processes are procedures for using existing knowledge to combine it with new knowledge and make decisions based on that knowledge. This study aims to identify the cognitive structure of students during information processing based on the level of algebraic reasoning ability. This type of research is qualitative with exploratory methods.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Cognitive Processes, Algebra, Mathematical Logic
Calderon, Ana C.; Skillicorn, Deiniol; Watt, Andrew; Perham, Nick – Education and Information Technologies, 2020
We propose the first steps towards a rigorous analysis of the effectiveness of an emerging pedagogy, Computational Thinking. We found that two aspects of the pedagogy have a positive effect with regard to enhancing two cognitive processes, namely sequential thinking and in abstract thinking. Our data was gathered experimentally with a cohort of…
Descriptors: Computation, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Processes, Logical Thinking
Antonides, Joseph; Battista, Michael T. – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2020
We report on findings from two one-on-one teaching experiments with prospective middle school teachers (PTs). The focus of each teaching experiment was on identifying and explicating the mental processes and types of intermediate, supporting reasoning that each PT used in their development of combinatorial reasoning. The teaching experiments were…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Middle Schools, Identification, Cognitive Processes
Clarissa A. Thompson; Jennifer M. Taber; Pooja G. Sidney; Charles J. Fitzsimmons; Marta K. Mielicki; Percival G. Matthews; Erika A. Schemmel; Nicolle Simonovic; Jeremy L. Foust; Pallavi Aurora; David J. Disabato; T. H. Stanley Seah; Lauren K. Schiller; Karin G. Coifman – Grantee Submission, 2021
At the onset of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) global pandemic, our interdisciplinary team hypothesized that a mathematical misconception--whole number bias (WNB)--contributed to beliefs that COVID-19 was less fatal than the flu. We created a brief online educational intervention for adults, leveraging evidence-based cognitive science…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Cognitive Processes, Logical Thinking
Doumas, Leonidas A. A.; Morrison, Robert G.; Richland, Lindsey Engle – Grantee Submission, 2018
Diagrams are powerful opportunities for grappling with and learning abstract relationships, for example learning the relations between elements in an ecosystem rather than simply memorizing the objects within the system. Further, what is crucial from any diagrammatic learning opportunity is the ability to use this relational knowledge in a new…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking, Attention
Rehder, Bob – Cognitive Science, 2017
This article assesses how people reason with categories whose features are related in causal cycles. Whereas models based on causal graphical models (CGMs) have enjoyed success modeling category-based judgments as well as a number of other cognitive phenomena, CGMs are only able to represent causal structures that are acyclic. A number of new…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Logical Thinking, Causal Models, Graphs
Grotzer, Tina A.; Tutwiler, M. Shane – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2014
This article considers a set of well-researched default assumptions that people make in reasoning about complex causality and argues that, in part, they result from the forms of causal induction that we engage in and the type of information available in complex environments. It considers how information often falls outside our attentional frame…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Heuristics, Causal Models, Logical Thinking
Johanes Pelamonia; Aloysius Duran Corebima – Journal of Baltic Science Education, 2015
A study had been conducted in qualitative design employing phenomenology approach to examine the cognitive basis and the semantic structure of phenomena based reasoning of lower secondary school students in Ambon. The data of the study were collected by using a test. Phenomena stimulus of science was given to the informants in the form of…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Foreign Countries, Cognitive Processes, Phenomenology
Pasnak, Robert – Grantee Submission, 2017
Young children have been taught simple sequences of alternating shapes and colors, referred to as "patterning", for the past half century in the hope that their understanding of pre-algebra and their mathematics achievement would be improved. The evidence that such patterning instruction actually improves children's academic achievement…
Descriptors: Pattern Recognition, Mathematics Achievement, Reading Achievement, Abstract Reasoning
Dauer, Jenny M.; Lute, Michelle L.; Straka, Olivia – International Journal of Education in Mathematics, Science and Technology, 2017
We propose two contrasting types of student decision-making based on social and cognitive psychology models of separate mental processes for problem solving. Informal decision-making uses intuitive reasoning and is subject to cognitive biases, whereas formal decision-making uses effortful, logical reasoning. We explored indicators of students'…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Science and Society, Cognitive Processes, Science Process Skills
Evers, Colin W.; Lakomski, Gabriele – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2015
The purpose of this paper is to outline some new developments in a mature research program that sees administrative theory as cohering with natural science and uses a coherence theory of epistemic justification to shape the content and structure of administrative theory. Three main developments are discussed. First, the paper shows how to deal…
Descriptors: Educational Administration, Leadership, Theories, Decision Making
Demetriou, Andreas; Christou, Constantinos – UNESCO International Bureau of Education, 2015
Information flows continuously in the environment. As we attempt to do something, our senses receive large volumes of information. In any conversation, messages are exchanged rapidly. To understand meaning, we have to focus, record, choose and process relevant information at every moment, before it is displaced by other information. Often,…
Descriptors: Intellectual Development, Individual Differences, Intelligence, Inferences
Kamsa, Imane; Elouahbi, Rachid; El Khoukhi, Fatima – Journal of Information Technology Education: Research, 2017
Aim/Purpose: To identify and rectify the learning difficulties of online learners. Background: The major cause of learners' failure and non-acquisition of knowledge relates to their weaknesses in certain areas necessary for optimal learning. We focus on e-learning because, within this environment, the learner is mostly affected by these…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, Masters Programs, Learning Disabilities