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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results Save | Export
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Leah M. Ridgway; Tom Cox – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2024
Contribution: This study uses a qualitative research method to analyze interviews where participants simplified an electric circuit while explaining their thought process. Background: Rearranging circuit diagrams is a fundamental skill in electrical and electronic engineering, yet students can struggle with unfamiliar configurations. Current…
Descriptors: Electronic Equipment, Visual Aids, Engineering Education, Undergraduate Students
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Ernest Koranteng – Science Education International, 2024
This study aimed to uncover common difficulties and possible areas for improvement by focusing on the approaches and errors made by 3rd-year undergraduate chemistry students in solving organic synthesis problems. The study employed a purposive sampling technique to select 112 undergraduate chemistry major students to participate in this study.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Chemistry, Science Instruction
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Lee, Chorong; Cho, Hyun Jin; Melloch, Michael R.; Levesque-Bristol, Chantal – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2022
Although testing is used mainly for assessing student learning, a new teaching strategy called concept-point recovery (CPR) makes testing a learning opportunity for engineering students to review errors and misconceptions. CPR allows students to regain points by reviewing wrong answers and explaining the solution process to the instructor to…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Learning Experience, Teaching Methods, Error Correction
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Katie Steckles; Claire Ketnor; Ros Porter; Alex Shukie; Alexander S. Corner – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications, 2025
Due to the nature of the teaching environment, students may often develop perceptions of their lecturers' ability as mathematicians, based on the pre-prepared and well-rehearsed content they present. In reality, performing mathematical calculations and solving problems is a difficult skill, and students may compare their own experiences…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Skills
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Avena, Jennifer S.; Knight, Jennifer K. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2019
Problem solving is an integral part of doing science, yet it is challenging for students in many disciplines to learn. We explored student success in solving genetics problems in several genetics content areas using sets of three consecutive questions for each content area. To promote improvement, we provided students the choice to take a…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, Genetics, Prompting, Science Tests
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Ding, Lu; Cooper, Katelyn M.; Stephens, Michelle D.; Chi, Michelene T. H.; Brownell, Sara E. – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2021
In laboratory study environments, dialogue-videos, or videos of a tutor and a tutee solving problems together, have been shown to more effectively improve student learning than monologue-videos, or videos of tutors solving problems alone. Yet, few studies have replicated these findings in the context of authentic university classrooms. Here, we…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Problem Solving, Undergraduate Students, Biology
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Nawaz, Sadia; Kennedy, Gregor; Bailey, James; Mead, Chris – Journal of Learning Analytics, 2020
Confusion is an important epistemic emotion because it can help students focus their attention and effort when solving complex learning tasks. However, unresolved confusion can be detrimental because it may result in students' disengagement. This is especially concerning in simulation environments using discovery-based learning, which puts more of…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Simulated Environment, Discovery Learning
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Kontorovich, Igor' – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2019
This study embarks on the question in the title with the construct of epistemological status, which pertains to the solver's satisfaction with the way and the degree to which their solution had fulfilled their intellectual and psychological needs in a particular problem situation. The construct is used to hypothesize that a solver's decision to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Problem Solving, Mathematics Skills, Equations (Mathematics)
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Reinholz, Daniel L. – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2018
Peer assessment has great potential to improve student learning. However, assessment is not an everyday activity for students, and thus providing appropriate guidance to students is a key component of creating a successful peer assessment experience. This paper explores how to structure peer feedback in the guided process Peer-Assisted Reflection…
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Undergraduate Students, Calculus
Brown, Sarah A.; Menendez, David; Alibali, Martha W. – Grantee Submission, 2019
Why do people change their strategies for solving problems? In this research, we tested whether negative feedback and the context in which learners encounter a strategy influence their likelihood of adopting that strategy. In particular, we examined whether strategy adoption varied when learners were exposed to a target strategy in isolation, in…
Descriptors: Student Characteristics, Learning Strategies, Problem Solving, Feedback (Response)
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McDonnell, Lisa; Mullally, Martha – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2016
An essential component skill of monitoring and reflection during problem solving is work checking, a process used by experts while solving problems to determine if their solution is achieving the goal. The results of work checking may reveal errors or inconsistencies, indicating a need for iteration. Using think-aloud interviews, the authors…
Descriptors: College Science, Protocol Analysis, Undergraduate Students, Genetics
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Brown, Benjamin R.; Mason, Andrew; Singh, Chandralekha – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2016
An earlier investigation found that the performance of advanced students in a quantum mechanics course did not automatically improve from midterm to final exam on identical problems even when they were provided the correct solutions and their own graded exams. Here, we describe a study, which extended over four years, in which upper-level…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Quantum Mechanics
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Wettstein, Stephanie G. – Advances in Engineering Education, 2018
In-class example problems that students work out on their own using active problem-solving are typically well received and help the students better learn the material; however, they are difficult to enact in large classes with limited resources due to the number of questions received and the speed at which different students work through the…
Descriptors: Pacing, Independent Study, Active Learning, Problem Solving
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Grigg, Sarah J.; Benson, Lisa C. – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2014
This study describes the development and structure of a coding scheme for analysing solutions to well-structured problems in terms of cognitive processes and problem-solving deficiencies for first-year engineering students. A task analysis approach was used to assess students' problem solutions using the hierarchical structure from a…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Coding, Problem Solving, Error Correction
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Insai, Sakolkarn; Poonlarp, Tongtip – PASAA: Journal of Language Teaching and Learning in Thailand, 2017
During the process of translation, students need to learn how to detect and correct errors in their translation drafts, and collaboration among themselves is one possible way to do this. As Pym (2003) has explained, translation is a process of problem-solving; translators must be able to decide which choices are more or less appropriate for the…
Descriptors: Editing, Peer Evaluation, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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