NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 6 results Save | Export
Lutz, Kathryn A. – 1980
This selective bibliography includes review articles and supportive and nonsupportive studies on two categories of instructional strategies that facilitate meaningful learning--imagery eleciting strategies and holistic strategies. Imagery strategies are those which involve picture or visual processing, e.g., text relevant illustrations, learner…
Descriptors: Advance Organizers, Behavioral Objectives, Flow Charts, Imagery
Duncan, Charlotte; Hartley, James – Programmed Learning Educ Technol, 1969
Descriptors: College Instruction, Recall (Psychology), Research, Responses
Strang, Harold R. – AV Communication Review, 1973
A description of a study in which pictures were used to teach vocational high school students to repair automobile distributors. (Author)
Descriptors: Auto Mechanics, High School Students, Independent Study, Intermode Differences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Kunen, Seth; Duncan, Edward M. – Journal of Educational Research, 1983
The value of verbal labeling is shown by a study of fourth-grade, eighth-grade, and college students who were shown pictures accompanied by short verbal descriptions. Verbal descriptions increased correct recognitions and rejections of unrelated distractors, while increasing false recognition of related distractors. Results were consistent for all…
Descriptors: College Students, Elementary Secondary Education, Grade 4, Grade 8
Dwyer, Francis M.; De Melo, Hermes – Journal of Visual/Verbal Languaging, 1984
This investigation evaluated performance of university students on visual and nonvisual versions of an achievement test. Two experimental designs assessed the effects and interactions between visual and nonvisual instructional modes, order of drawing test (before or after verbal/visual achievement test), and mode of drawing test (verbal cued or…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Evaluation Methods, Graphs, Higher Education
Kinnear, Judith; Martin, Marjory – 1989
One aim of this study was to identify, in a group of unsuccessful college level problem solvers, the status and use of their declarative knowledge as revealed by students' attempts to solve novel problems in a pencil-and-paper setting. It was hypothesized that for some unsuccessful problem solvers, their problem representation could be improved by…
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Uses in Education