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Mai Abdullah Alqaed – Advanced Education, 2024
Artificial intelligence (AI) is gaining wide attention in second language learning as a beneficial tool. The current research investigates EFL learners' perceptions and usage of AI applications among 68 undergraduate English language major students. The aim is to enhance students' awareness of valuable AI applications and involve them with AI…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Student Attitudes, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction
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Attila M. Wind – Journal of Response to Writing, 2024
The positive effects of dynamic written corrective feedback (DWCF) on linguistic accuracy are well-documented (Evans et al., 2010). However, studies on DWCF without exception have adopted a pretest--posttest research design; therefore, they were unable to explore the dynamics of development (Larsen-Freeman, 2006). In addition, all previous DWCF…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Written Language, Undergraduate Students, Essays
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Stouffer, Joe – Reading Teacher, 2021
Responding to recent challenges to Clay's Running Records (2019) and their analysis using a three-cueing system, the author examines this reading assessment from an additive perspective of both bottom-up and top-down orientations of reading instruction. Endorsing their inclusion among classroom reading assessments, the author navigates the tension…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Evaluation Methods, Student Evaluation, Reading Fluency
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DiSanti, Brittany Marie; Eikeseth, Svein; Eldevik, Sigmund – International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education, 2023
We evaluated two procedures to teach auditory-visual conditional discriminations (receptive labeling) to children with autism. The procedures evaluated a modified Structured Mix (SM) procedure and a modified Counterbalanced Random Rotation (RR) procedure. The modified SM procedure was based on the logic of simplifying the task by breaking it down…
Descriptors: Auditory Discrimination, Visual Discrimination, Teaching Methods, Autism Spectrum Disorders
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Trueman, Jennifer – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2019
Mistakes are a window into students' mathematical understanding. Taking the time to analyze mistakes can inform you of where students are in their thinking. They can also guide you with respect to how to proceed with instruction. Introduced here are two categories of mistakes: meaty mistakes and minor mistakes. Meaty mistakes demonstrate gaps in…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Error Correction, Mathematics Skills, Mathematics Instruction
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Beth A. Lindsey; Andrew Boudreaux; Drew J. Rosen; MacKenzie R. Stetzer; Mila Kryjevskaia – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
In this study, we have explored the effectiveness of two instructional approaches in the context of the motion of objects falling at terminal speed in the presence of air resistance. We ground these instructional approaches in dual-process theories of reasoning, which assert that human cognition relies on two thinking processes. Dual-process…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Instructional Effectiveness, Motion
Metcalfe, Janet; Huelser, Barbie J. – Grantee Submission, 2020
Many recent studies have shown that memory for correct answers is enhanced when an error is committed and then corrected, as compared to when the correct answer is provided without intervening error commission. The fact that the kind of errors that produced such a benefit, in past research, were those that were semantically related to the correct…
Descriptors: Recall (Psychology), Memory, Learning Processes, Error Patterns
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Wong, Sarah Shi Hui; Lim, Stephen Wee Hun – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2022
Our civilization recognizes that errors can be valuable learning opportunities, but for decades, they have widely been avoided or, at best, allowed to occur as serendipitous accidents. The present research tested whether greater learning success could paradoxically be achieved through making errors by intentional design, relative to traditional…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Error Patterns, Error Correction, Learning Processes
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Vanluyten, Kian; Cheng, Shu; Coolkens, Rosalie; Roure, Cédric; Ward, Phillip; Iserbyt, Peter – Journal of Physical Education, Recreation & Dance, 2023
The goal of parkour is to cross various obstacles in an efficient and creative way by jumping, swinging, climbing, and running. Parkour aligns with the SHAPE America national standards for K-12 physical education and has demonstrated its potential to highly engage both boys and girls in moderate-to-vigorous physical activity (MVPA). In this…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Physical Activities, Physical Education, Formative Evaluation
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Veena Paliwal – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2023
This study was designed to examine the use of mistakes to promote students' performance in undergraduate Algebra classes by developing a growth mindset. Participants were seventy-four students from three Algebra classes and received one of the three interventions along with regular instruction: (a) growth mindset feedback on mistakes…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Algebra
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Crozier, William E.; Strange, Deryn – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2019
Decades of memory research have demonstrated a dire need for effective methods of correcting misinformation, particularly once it has been encoded. However, much of this research has exposed participants to misinformation first then provided a correction, and used indirect memory questions. Using a misinformation effect (ME) paradigm, in which…
Descriptors: Memory, Misconceptions, Error Patterns, Error Correction
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Chen, Hsueh Chu; Han, Qian Wen – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2023
According to the speech learning model [Flege, J. E. (1995). Second language speech learning: Theory, findings, and problems. In W. Strange (Ed.), "Speech perception and linguistic experience: Issues in cross-language research" (pp. 233-277). York Press], learners whose first language (L1) is a tonal language (e.g. Cantonese) can be…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Second Language Learning, Sino Tibetan Languages, Mandarin Chinese
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Wong, Sarah Shi Hui – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
Transfer of learning is a fundamental goal of education but is challenging to achieve, especially where far transfer to remote contexts is at stake. How can we improve learners' flexible application of knowledge to distant domains? In a counterintuitive phenomenon termed the "derring effect," deliberately committing and correcting errors…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Error Correction, Learning Processes, Undergraduate Students
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Özdemir, Ercan; Dede, Ercan – International Online Journal of Education and Teaching, 2022
This study aims to determine how prospective middle school mathematics teachers respond to students' errors in the questions about the equal sign. This study utilizes case study method. In this case study, hypothetical scenarios, involving three common error types related to the equal sign, have been prepared by using the possible examples of…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Middle School Teachers, Error Patterns
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Yoshimasa Ogawa – Journal of Response to Writing, 2025
This study explored a way to help Japanese university students write longer essays while maintaining grammatical accuracy. Participants were three groups of students enrolled in a one-year EFL course in different academic years (N = 111), and the number of words they wrote in 30 minutes and the number of errors made per 100 words were compared. To…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Second Language Learning, Accuracy, Writing Evaluation
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