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Small, Mario L.; Cook, Jenna M. – Sociological Methods & Research, 2023
This article examines an important and thorny problem in interview research: How to assess whether what people say motivated their actions actually did so? We ask three questions: What specific challenges are at play? How have researchers addressed them? And how should those strategies be evaluated? We argue that such research faces at least five…
Descriptors: Interviews, Qualitative Research, Barriers, Deception
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Yim, Soobin; Warschauer, Mark – Language Learning & Technology, 2017
The increasingly widespread use of social software (e.g., Wikis, Google Docs) in second language (L2) settings has brought a renewed attention to collaborative writing. Although the current methodological approaches to examining collaborative writing are valuable to understand L2 students' interactional patterns or perceived experiences, they can…
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Writing Processes
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van de Wiel, Margje W. J. – Frontline Learning Research, 2017
To understand expertise and expertise development, interactions between knowledge, cognitive processing and task characteristics must be examined in people at different levels of training, experience, and performance. Interviewing is widely used in the initial exploration of domain expertise. Work and cognitive task analysis chart the knowledge,…
Descriptors: Expertise, Cognitive Processes, Task Analysis, Learning Processes
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DeWitt, Jennifer; Osborne, Jonathan – International Journal of Science Education, 2010
One issue of interest to practitioners and researchers in science centres concerns what meanings visitors are making from their interactions with exhibits and how they make sense of these experiences. The research reported in this study is an exploratory attempt, therefore, to investigate this process by using video clips and still photographs of…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Exhibits, Foreign Countries, Science Teaching Centers
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Mistry, Jayanthi J.; Lange, Garrett W. – Child Development, 1985
When 60 five-year-old and 48 10-year-old children heard three stories, each containing three target objects from each of three taxonomic categories, younger children received greater benefit than older children from strongly scripted story presentations and from constrained category-cue and script-cue retrieval conditions. Cues and the extent to…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Children, Classification, Cues
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DeLoache, Judy S.; And Others – Child Development, 1985
Discusses strategy-like behaviors in a memory-for-location task found in four studies of 18- to 24-month-old children. Interprets results as evidence of an early natural propensity to keep alive what must be remembered, a rudimentary version of what will later become more elaborate mnemonic strategies. (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Metacognition, Mnemonics, Recall (Psychology)
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Rabinowitz, Mitchell – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1984
Assesses children's recall performance using three memory instructions: standard free recall, repetition, and categorical processing. Recall performance was about equal for standard versus repetition and superior when category processing is used, especially with highly representative items. Concludes that at both 7 years and 10 years the…
Descriptors: Children, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Memory
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Waddell, Kathryn J.; Rogoff, Barbara – Developmental Psychology, 1987
Study looks at whether spatial memory is automatic by examining the effects of intentionality and attention to contextual organization in spatial memory. The pattern of results demonstrated that reconstruction was enhanced by intentionality or by the goal-relevant activity of attending to contextual spatial relations. (Author/RWB)
Descriptors: Adults, Cognitive Ability, Memory, Recall (Psychology)
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Zupan, Brian A.; And Others – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1987
Explores recall of positive and negative self-descriptive adjectives by children with current or past histories of diagnosable depression; these children showed even stronger recall of negative self-descriptive adjectives than in previous research. However, extent of previous depression did not predict degree of negativity of current self-schema…
Descriptors: Children, Depression (Psychology), Mothers, Recall (Psychology)
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Chi, Michelene T. H. – Human Development, 1985
Presents evidence from the memory development literature showing why strategies and metaknowledge are not sufficient factors to account for memory development. Summarizes current research on the influence of the general knowledge base, including general world-knowledge and domain-specific knowledge and procedures. Discusses questions that must be…
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Learning Strategies, Memory, Metacognition
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Bjorklund, David F.; Bjorklund, Barbara R. – Developmental Psychology, 1985
Investigates the extent to which the high levels of recall and organization observed when children are asked to recall classmates' names (class recall) can be attributed to organizational versus item-specific effects. (Author/NH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Memory, Recall (Psychology)
Mayer, John D.; Bower, Gordon H. – 1986
The mood-dependent retrieval hypothesis states that mood will enhance recall by acting as a recall cue if the stimuli have been learned initially in the same mood. Material learned in a happy mood will be best recalled when the person returns to a happy mood; the same holds for a sad mood. Mood-dependent retrieval effect has been regulary…
Descriptors: Cues, Recall (Psychology), Research Problems, Retention (Psychology)
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Ackerman, Brian P. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1987
Results from three experiments suggest that attention to context may benefit target recall in situations in which the context can be meaningfully related to the target. Adults seem to be more able to engage in context-interactive processing of stimulus information than are children, who base target selection on perceptual information. (PCB)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Attention, Children, Cues
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Pullyblank, John; And Others – Child Development, 1985
Among children 7 to 11 years of age, recall of words initially accompanied by self-reference questions was found to be superior to recall of words accompanied by semantic questions at all age levels. The advantage of self-reference did not vary with age. Results were interpreted in terms of a distinction between functional and expressive…
Descriptors: Adjectives, Adults, Children, Cognitive Processes
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Bjorklund, David F.; Jacobs, John W. III – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 1985
Free recall performance of children in grades three, five, seven, and nine and of adults was assessed according to a list of categorically related words. Results indicated that seventh and ninth graders were more apt to use associative relations to begin category clusters than were younger children or adults. (Author/BE)
Descriptors: Adults, Age Differences, Association (Psychology), Children
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