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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results Save | Export
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Wanxue Zhang; Lingling Meng; Bilan Liang – Interactive Learning Environments, 2023
With the continuous development of education, personalized learning has attracted great attention. How to evaluate students' learning effects has become increasingly important. In information technology courses, the traditional academic evaluation focuses on the student's learning outcomes, such as "scores" or "right/wrong,"…
Descriptors: Information Technology, Computer Science Education, High School Students, Scoring
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Agustian, Hendra Y. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2022
This article seeks to provide researchers and practitioners in laboratory education, particularly those involved in the curriculum design and implementation of teaching laboratories at university level, with a conceptual framework and a working model for an integrated assessment of learning domains, by attending to a more holistic approach to…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Laboratory Experiments, Curriculum Design
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Eun, Barohny; Knotek, Steven E. – Research in Education, 2022
A Vygotskian approach to assessment is proposed by invoking the distinction between the development of lower and higher psychological functions. Higher psychological functions are specifically human and develop with the use of cultural tools via mediation. Accordingly, a distinction is made between tests that are based on association, which have…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Sociocultural Patterns, Psychological Patterns, Teaching Methods
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Muijs, Daniel; Bokhove, Christian – Education Endowment Foundation, 2020
Metacognition and self-regulated learning (SLR) have been advocated by many and have significant support being seen as a potentially effective and low cost way of impacting learning. Fundamentally, the underlying supposition is that metacognition and SRL are important to learning, and thus raise attainment, and various studies have established…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Independent Study, Definitions, Memory
American Psychological Association, 2019
Psychological science has much to contribute to enhancing teaching and learning in the classroom. Teaching and learning, in turn, are intricately linked to social and behavioral factors of human development, including cognition, motivation, social interaction, and communication. Psychological science also contributes to effective instruction;…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Psychology, Instruction, Learning Processes
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Hodges, David; Eames, Chris; Coll, Richard K. – Asia-Pacific Journal of Cooperative Education, 2014
In this paper we examine theoretical perspectives on assessment in cooperative education placements. As assessment is linked to student learning, we focus briefly on the purposes of assessment. We then consider a range of learning theories that have been, and are more recently, explored as ways to explain the process of learning on cooperative…
Descriptors: Cooperative Education, Student Placement, Measurement Objectives, Student Evaluation
Jones, Jacqueline – Principal, 2011
Understanding the rapid and episodic learning and development of young children is a complex undertaking. In the early years, each child experiences the most dramatic developmental and learning period in his or her lifetime. In addition, there is marked variability among children in the rate and pattern of typical development. Motor,…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Young Children, Cognitive Development, Child Development
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Steedle, Jeffrey T.; Shavelson, Richard J. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2009
Assessments associated with learning progressions are designed to provide diagnostic information about the level and nature of student understanding. Valid interpretations of such diagnoses are only possible when students consistently express the ideas associated with a single learning progression level. Latent class analysis was employed to…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Learning Processes, Student Evaluation, Comprehension
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Daley, Barbara J.; Canas, Alberto J.; Stark-Schweitzer, Tracy – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2007
Concept maps are an instructional strategy that promotes meaningful learning. This chapter examines the use of concept maps in online environments through discussion of CmapTools software. (Contains 1 table and 1 figure.)
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Online Courses, Concept Mapping, Computer Software
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Almond, Russell G. – ETS Research Report Series, 2007
Over the course of instruction, instructors generally collect a great deal of information about each student. Integrating that information intelligently requires models for how a student's proficiency changes over time. Armed with such models, instructors can "filter" the data--more accurately estimate the student's current proficiency…
Descriptors: Markov Processes, Decision Making, Student Evaluation, Learning Processes
Gentry, J. Richard – Diagnostique, 1982
The article views assessing spelling as a cognitive and developmental process. Five developmental levels that may precede readiness for formal spelling instruction are described and illustrated. A word list and directions for assessing children's developmental levels are followed by prescriptive guidelines for cognitive and developmental…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Disabilities, Elementary Education, Learning Processes
Spragg, Paul A. – 1984
The paper suggests that a cognitive or psychoeducational perspective is valuable in counseling mentally retarded individuals. Psychoeducational considerations in pretreatment assessment, with an emphasis on process rather than product, are noted; and it is explained that counseling of mentally retarded persons can be enhanced through the use of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Counseling Techniques, Learning Processes, Mental Retardation
Anderson, Terry – Learning, 1996
This paper answers several frequently asked questions about constructivism, including how to define it, how to plan the curriculum, how to assess student understanding, what to do with the information, where to begin, how students work in a constructivist classroom, and why constructivism is important. (SM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Elementary Education, Learning Processes
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Remington, Bob – International Journal of Disability, Development and Education, 1996
This article discusses basic learning processes utilized by children with profound intellectual disabilities, including classical conditioning, operant conditioning, and habituation. The article also explores how these learning processes may be used in assessing the capabilities and preferences of children with profound intellectual disabilities.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Behavior Change, Children, Classical Conditioning
Lesch, Lyn – Rowman & Littlefield Education, 2007
Author Lyn Lesch advocates that learning cannot be measured by empirical results like testing and grading. As the founder of Chicago's The Children's School, Lesch didn't give grades or submit students to standardized testing. Such conditions may seem blasphemous to most educators, but the results spoke for themselves. Without the high-stakes…
Descriptors: Student Needs, Educational Testing, Standardized Tests, Student Attitudes
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