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Chin, Huan; Chew, Cheng Meng – International Journal of Assessment Tools in Education, 2023
Years and Centuries are the measurement units used to quantify a longer time duration, while subtraction is the operation required to determine the duration based on two given time points. However, subtraction of time is a difficult skill to be mastered by many elementary students. To identify the root cause of the student's failure in performing…
Descriptors: Measurement, Time, Subtraction, Elementary School Students
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Yang, Zong-kai; Wang, Meng; Cheng, Hercy N. H.; Liu, San-ya; Liu, Lin; Chan, Tak-Wai – Asia-Pacific Education Researcher, 2016
Research indicates that learning from erroneous examples (EE) is superior to correct examples because errors may provide students with a stimulus to spontaneously produce more self-explanations, leading to better learning outcomes. However, because most studies were conducted in individual settings, it remains an open question whether the…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Models, Cooperative Learning, Elementary School Students
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van Lieshout, Ernest C. D. M.; Xenidou-Dervou, Iro – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2018
At the start of mathematics education children are often presented with addition and subtraction problems in the form of pictures. They are asked to solve the problems by filling in corresponding number sentences. One type of problem concerns the representation of an increase or a decrease in a depicted amount. A decrease is, however, more…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Addition
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Borst, Jelmer P.; Taatgen, Niels A.; van Rijn, Hedderik – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2010
The main challenge for theories of multitasking is to predict when and how tasks interfere. Here, we focus on interference related to the problem state, a directly accessible intermediate representation of the current state of a task. On the basis of Salvucci and Taatgen's (2008) threaded cognition theory, we predict interference if 2 or more…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cognitive Processes, Models, Time Management
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Kong, Siu Cheung; Kwok, Lam For – Computers and Education, 2005
The aim of this research is to devise a cognitive tool for meeting the diverse needs of learners for comprehending new procedural knowledge. A model of affordances on teaching fraction equivalence for developing procedural knowledge for adding/subtracting fractions with unlike denominators was derived from the results of a case study of an initial…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Comprehension, Knowledge Level, Mathematics
Langley, Pat; And Others – 1984
The notion of buggy procedures has played an important role in recent cognitive models of mathematical skills. Some earlier work on student modeling used artificial intelligence methods to automatically construct buggy models of student behavior. An alternate approach, proposed here, draws on insights from the rapidly developing field of machine…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Processes, Computer Simulation
Mislevy, Robert J. – 1994
Recent developments in cognitive psychology suggest models for knowledge and learning that often fall outside the realm of standard test theory. This paper concerns probability-based inference in terms of such models. The essential idea is to define a space of "student models"--simplified characterizations of students' knowledge, skill,…
Descriptors: Bayesian Statistics, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Psychology, Educational Diagnosis
De Corte, Erik; And Others – 1984
This study investigates the influence of changes in the wording of simple addition and subtraction problems without affecting their semantic structure on the level of difficulty of those problems for first and second graders and on the nature of their errors. The objective is to contribute to a better understanding of the process of constructing a…
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Grade 1
Suppes, Patrick; And Others – 1981
This report presents a theory of eye movement that accounts for main features of the stochastic behavior of eye-fixation durations and direction of movement of saccades in the process of solving arithmetic exercises of addition and subtraction. The best-fitting distribution of fixation durations with a relatively simple theoretical justification…
Descriptors: Addition, Algorithms, Cognitive Processes, Computation
Skemp, Richard R. – 1981
Provided is an examination of the methodology used to study the problems of learning addition and subtraction skills used by developmental researchers. The report has sections on categories of theory and their methodologies, which review: (1) Behaviorist, Neo-Behaviorist and Piagetian Theories; (2) the Behaviorist and Piagetian Paradigms; (3)…
Descriptors: Addition, Behavior Theories, Cognitive Processes, Educational Research
Hamrin, Jeannie M. – 1978
A computer model of memory (based on input, retrieval, and reaction time) was applied to the rapid processing of simple arithmetic facts (addition, subtraction, and multiplication) by 18 educable retarded adolescents when compared with 18 nonretarded fourth graders (of equal mental age) and 18 normal adolescents. Results for addition indicated…
Descriptors: Addition, Adolescents, Arithmetic, Cognitive Processes
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Ohlsson, Stellan; And Others – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1992
Proposes a theory of cognitive processes in doing and learning place value arithmetic. Discusses a computer model that simulates the learning of multicolumn subtraction under one-on-one tutoring to measure the relative difficulty of two methods of subtraction. The model predicts that regrouping is more difficult to learn than an alternative…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Cognitive Measurement, Cognitive Processes, Computation
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Boulton-Lewis, Gillian M. – Journal of Mathematical Behavior, 1993
Describes research which compared the processing loads of mathematical representations and strategies used by (n=3) teachers and (n=29) children aged 5-8 for interpreting subtraction operations represented in numerical form. Some representations and strategies appeared to impose an extra processing load which can interfere with conceptual…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Teachers
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Carpenter, Thomas P.; And Others – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1993
After a year of instruction, 70 kindergarten children were individually interviewed as they solved basic, multistep, and nonroutine word problems. Thirty-two used a valid strategy for all 9 problems, and 44 correctly answered 7 or more problems. Modeling provided a unifying framework for thinking about problem solving. (Author/MDH)
Descriptors: Addition, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Division
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Beishuizen, Meindert – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1993
Describes a program in second-grade Dutch mathematics classes that emphasizes mental addition and subtraction of two-digit numbers up to 100. Deals with a strategy of counting by 10s from any number. (Contains 56 references.) (RLB)
Descriptors: Addition, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style