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Dorland, AnneMarie – Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching, 2023
Meaningful and impactful learning experiences are rife with failure. And yet, students struggle with framing, tolerating and attributing failure in a positive manner within the post-secondary learning context. This paper explores whether using design thinking as a pedagogical approach might help students learn to tolerate, reframe and attribute…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Business Administration Education, Marketing, Design
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Giabbanelli, Philippe J.; Tawfik, Andrew A. – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2019
Because of the lack of tools available to assess problem-solving skills, teachers often revert to more traditional instructional approaches (e.g. lecture-based, memorization) that fail to prepare learners for the complexity of dynamic work environments. To overcome this challenge, technology solutions are needed that accurately and efficiently…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Problem Solving, Attribution Theory, Maps
Schunk, Dale H.; Cox, Paula D. – 1986
The experiment reported here investigated how verbalization of subtraction with regrouping operations influenced learning disabled students' self-efficacy and skillful performance, and also explored how effort attributional feedback affected these achievement behaviors. Learning disabled students (N=90) from grades 6 through 8 received training…
Descriptors: Attribution Theory, Feedback, Learning Disabilities, Learning Processes
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Murayama, Isao – Human Development, 1994
Proposes causal field theory as a model of causal reasoning. Suggests that anomaly detection through comparison with natural events triggers causal reasoning. This anomaly is interpreted in terms of agency; therefore, natural phenomena can be understood through an appeal to agency. The mechanism proposed never changes with development, whereas…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Attribution Theory, Children, Cognitive Development
Schunk, Dale H. – 1996
The concept of self-regulation--the process whereby students activate and sustain behaviors and cognitive paths which are systematically oriented toward attainment of learning goals--is increasing in importance among educators. Self-regulation includes activities such as attending to instruction; organizing, coding, and rehearsing information;…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Attribution Theory, Child Development, Cognitive Development