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Nicolucci, Sandra – Music Educators Journal, 2010
This article focuses on the nature of the "transitional minutes" in "any" music class. When transitional minutes before, during, and after rehearsals and classes are unplanned and left to chance, much viable and valuable teaching time is lost. When transitional minutes are well structured, learning can proceed efficiently. One…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Serial Ordering, Short Term Memory
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Pachur, Thorsten; Hertwig, Ralph – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
The recognition heuristic is a prime example of a boundedly rational mind tool that rests on an evolved capacity, recognition, and exploits environmental structures. When originally proposed, it was conjectured that no other probabilistic cue reverses the recognition-based inference (D. G. Goldstein & G. Gigerenzer, 2002). More recent studies…
Descriptors: Heuristics, Recognition (Psychology), Primacy Effect, Inferences
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Morgan, Denise N.; Williams, Jeffery L. – Reading Teacher, 2007
Writers carefully include critical information in the opening lines of their chapters, but students often gloss over these beginning sentences, missing information that could help them better comprehend the text. To address this concern, the authors created a strategy that prompts students to examine the opening lines of chapters, helping readers…
Descriptors: Sentences, Learning Strategies, Reading Improvement, Reading Strategies
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Sikstrom, Sverker – Cognitive Science, 2006
An item that stands out (is isolated) from its context is better remembered than an item consistent with the context. This isolation effect cannot be accounted for by increased attention, because it occurs when the isolated item is presented as the first item, or by impoverished memory of nonisolated items, because the isolated item is better…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Primacy Effect, Short Term Memory, Depression (Psychology)
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Sikstrom, Sverker – Cognitive Psychology, 2002
Forgetting in long-term memory, as measured in a recall or a recognition test, is faster for items encoded more recently than for items encoded earlier. Data on forgetting curves fit a power function well. In contrast, many connectionist models predict either exponential decay or completely flat forgetting curves. This paper suggests a…
Descriptors: Intervals, Recognition (Psychology), Long Term Memory, Knowledge Representation