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Project Tomorrow, 2015
The Speak Up National Research Project annually polls K-12 students, parents and educators about the role of technology for learning in and out of school. For the past twelve years, Project Tomorrow's® annual Speak Up Research Project has provided schools and districts nationwide and throughout the globe with new insights into how today's students…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Elementary School Students, Secondary School Students, Computer Uses in Education
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Biemans, Harm J. A.; Simons, P. Robert-Jan – Learning and Instruction, 1992
Effects of embedding regulation questions and regulation hints in a concurrent computer-assisted instruction program aimed at word processor use were examined for 133 Dutch second-grade vocational education students. Results support the value of regulation questions and hints in learning to use the word processing program. (SLD)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Science Education, Elementary Education, Elementary School Students
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Lehrer, Richard; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1988
A long-term instructional experiment involving 45 third graders learning LOGO demonstrated that LOGO fulfills some of its early promise when used in carefully crafted educational contexts. There was little evidence of boosting general problem-solving skills as a result of learning programing, but learning geometry appeared enhanced. (SLD)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Science Education, Computer Software
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clements, Douglas H. – American Educational Research Journal, 1991
The effects of the LOGO computer programing environment on creativity were studied for 73 8-year-old third graders (33 males and 40 females) who were tested before and after LOGO instruction. Overall, the LOGO group significantly outperformed a comparison group receiving non-LOGO creativity training and a nontreatment control group. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Science Education, Creative Development
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Lehrer, Richard; Littlefield, Joan – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1991
Whether software-based mediated instruction reduces the incidence of misconceptions and errors by children learning the LOGO computer language was studied with 24 fourth and 46 second graders. Mediated instruction reduced errors and misconceptions compared to those detected in prior studies. The roles of working memory and true misunderstandings…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Science Education, Computer Software, Educational Practices
Papert, Seymour; Solomon, Cynthia – 1971
Ideas about computers in education are usually limited to transactions of a conversational form between students and machines. Computers, however, can do many other things and it is only inertia and prejudice, not lack of ideas, which stand in the way of broadening the range of computer applications in schools. Several examples, over half of which…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Graphics, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Science Education
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Papert, Seymour – Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education (CITE Journal), 2005
The phrase "technology and education" usually means inventing new gadgets to teach the same old stuff in a thinly disguised version of the same old way. Moreover, if the gadgets are computers, the same old teaching becomes incredibly more expensive and biased towards its dullest parts, namely the kind of rote learning in which measurable…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods, Technology Uses in Education, Programming Languages