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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results Save | Export
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Janet Metcalfe; Judy Xu; Matti Vuorre; Robert Siegler; Dylan Wiliam; Robert A. Bjork – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2025
Background: Although the generation of errors has been thought, traditionally, to impair learning, recent studies indicate that, under particular feedback conditions, the commission of errors may have a beneficial effect. Aims: This study investigates the teaching strategies that facilitate learning from errors. Materials and Methods: This 2-year…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Error Correction, Direct Instruction, Test Preparation
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Zhen Wang; Xinrui Pei; Hejie Zhu; Shaoying Gong; Enguo Wang – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2024
This research aims to expand our understanding of how to facilitate student feedback engagement processes in a computer-based formative assessment environment. In the present research, we designed a new type of elaborated feedback in terms of combining the correct solution and the erroneous solution, and the erroneous solution matched the…
Descriptors: Junior High School Students, Junior High School Teachers, Feedback (Response), Computer Assisted Instruction
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Cai, Jinfa; LaRochelle, Raymond; Hwang, Stephen; Kaiser, Gabriele – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2022
This study examined how expert and novice (preservice) teachers solved mathematical modelling tasks as well as how they noticed written artifacts of student thinking that were in response to the mathematical modelling tasks. Some teachers in both groups were aware of the openness and underdetermination of the modelling tasks and that these…
Descriptors: Experienced Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Teacher Competencies
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Fyfe, Emily R.; Borriello, Giulia A.; Merrick, Megan – Educational Psychologist, 2023
Research in psychology and education indicates that corrective feedback can be a powerful learning tool. We provide a developmental perspective to focus specifically on how corrective feedback influences learning in childhood ([approximately]ages 3-11). Based on a systematic search, we review 44 empirical papers published between 1990 and 2022…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Error Correction, Literacy Education, Mathematics Education
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Manson, Elisapesi; Ayres, Paul – Educational Psychology, 2021
This study investigated the effectiveness of using a sequence of worked examples as part of the feedback cycle. Worked examples were either presented as full worked examples or partial worked examples (single-step and completion formats). In two experiments, grade 8 students completed a learning phase on a mathematics topic, which was immediately…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Feedback (Response), Demonstrations (Educational), Direct Instruction
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Zhang, Mengxue; Wang, Zichao; Baraniuk, Richard; Lan, Andrew – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2021
Feedback on student answers and even during intermediate steps in their solutions to open-ended questions is an important element in math education. Such feedback can help students correct their errors and ultimately lead to improved learning outcomes. Most existing approaches for automated student solution analysis and feedback require manually…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Error Patterns
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Lee, Sungeun; Choi, Young-il; Kim, Sung-Won – International Journal of Science Education, 2021
The purpose of this study is to find a way to improve students' performance to solve physics problems by inducing changes in emotion via immediate feedback. To this end, in 2016, we conducted an experiment, doing an interview and survey consecutively. The participants were five second-year male students attending a private high school in Seoul,…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Feedback (Response), Error Correction, Physics
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Reinholz, Daniel L. – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2018
Peer assessment has great potential to improve student learning. However, assessment is not an everyday activity for students, and thus providing appropriate guidance to students is a key component of creating a successful peer assessment experience. This paper explores how to structure peer feedback in the guided process Peer-Assisted Reflection…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Undergraduate Students, Calculus
Brown, Sarah A.; Menendez, David; Alibali, Martha W. – Grantee Submission, 2019
Why do people change their strategies for solving problems? In this research, we tested whether negative feedback and the context in which learners encounter a strategy influence their likelihood of adopting that strategy. In particular, we examined whether strategy adoption varied when learners were exposed to a target strategy in isolation, in…
Descriptors: Student Characteristics, Learning Strategies, Problem Solving, Feedback (Response)
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Boote, Stacy K.; Boote, David N. – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2018
Mathematical habits of prospective teachers affect problem comprehension and success and expose their beliefs about mathematics. Prospective elementary teachers (PSTs) (n = 121) engaged in a problem solving activity each week in class. Data were collected from PSTs enrolled in an undergraduate elementary mathematics methods course at a…
Descriptors: Mathematics Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Instruction, Beliefs
Saunders, Alicia F.; Spooner, Fred; Ley Davis, Luann – Remedial and Special Education, 2018
Mathematical problem solving is necessary in many facets of everyday life, yet little research exists on how to teach students with more severe disabilities higher order mathematics like problem solving. Using a multiple probe across participants design, three middle school students with moderate intellectual disability (ID) were taught to solve…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Video Technology, Prompting, Simulation
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McDonnell, Lisa; Mullally, Martha – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2016
An essential component skill of monitoring and reflection during problem solving is work checking, a process used by experts while solving problems to determine if their solution is achieving the goal. The results of work checking may reveal errors or inconsistencies, indicating a need for iteration. Using think-aloud interviews, the authors…
Descriptors: College Science, Protocol Analysis, Undergraduate Students, Genetics
Metcalfe, Janet – Grantee Submission, 2017
Although error avoidance during learning appears to be the rule in American classrooms, laboratory studies suggest that it may be a counterproductive strategy, at least for neurologically typical students. Experimental investigations indicate that errorful learning followed by corrective feedback is beneficial to learning. Interestingly, the…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Error Correction, Feedback (Response), Educational Benefits
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Wettstein, Stephanie G. – Advances in Engineering Education, 2018
In-class example problems that students work out on their own using active problem-solving are typically well received and help the students better learn the material; however, they are difficult to enact in large classes with limited resources due to the number of questions received and the speed at which different students work through the…
Descriptors: Pacing, Independent Study, Active Learning, Problem Solving
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Easterday, Matthew W.; Aleven, Vincent; Scheines, Richard; Carver, Sharon M. – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2017
How might we balance assistance and penalties to intelligent tutors and educational games that increase learning and interest? We created two versions of an educational game for learning policy argumentation called Policy World. The game (only) version provided minimal feedback and penalized students for errors whereas the game+tutor version…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Intelligent Tutoring Systems, Policy, Persuasive Discourse
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