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Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results Save | Export
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Anu Kajamaa – Learning Organization, 2011
Purpose: The aim of this article is to examine whether the boundary between the separate worlds of evaluation and frontline work in a hospital can be overcome. The study provides an example of a rare, innovative creation process of an assessment tool in which the tool users and the tool producer participated. The article aims to widen the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Hospitals, Vertical Organization, Nurses
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Markham, Ellen M.; And Others – Cognition, 1980
Children aged 6 to l7 were taught novel class inclusion hierarchies, analogous to the relation among oaks, pines, and trees. The results indicated that the part-whole structure of collections is simpler to establish and maintain than the structure of inclusion. (Author/RL)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Style, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Processes
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Bergan, John R. – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1980
This study illustrates a process for selecting a preferred model in the validation of hierarchical learning scales. The test performance of 100 8-to 11-year-old children on subtraction tasks involving variations in borrowing are examined. Goodman's response scaling technique is illustrated. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Learning Theories, Mathematical Models, Problem Solving
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Cancelli, Anthony A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1980
The complexity hypothesis suggests that the hierarchical arrangement of learning tasks is related to the complexity of the task. Using a definition of complexity based on an analysis of the rules governing performance on a task, the present study lent support to the hypothesis. (Author/GDC)
Descriptors: Classification, Difficulty Level, Elementary Education, Learning Theories
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Shapiro, Amy M. – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 1999
Explores the relevance of hierarchies to information processing. Suggests that participants in all conditions create hierarchical representations as they work, and those in nonlinear conditions use this structure to guide their exploration of the material. An important function of hierarchies may be to define relationships between concepts.…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Cognitive Structures, Hypermedia, Learning Strategies
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Nesbit, John C.; Hunka, Steve – Instructional Science, 1987
Proposes a criterion for selecting a sequence of objectives from a learning hierarchy and describes a sequence generating algorithm which is designed to generate a minimal memory load sequence from a learning tree. Its effectiveness in generating low memory load sequences from hierarchies that are not trees is also discussed. (RP)
Descriptors: Algorithms, Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Objectives, Instructional Design
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Browder, Diane M.; And Others – Journal of Special Education, 1987
Observational learning is theoretically conceptualized as a skill that can be developed along a learning hierarchy from acquisition and fluency development to generalization of imitative behavior. This review characterizes these levels of observational learning and details differential teaching strategies that have been attempted at each level…
Descriptors: Definitions, Disabilities, Elementary Secondary Education, Generalization
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DeVecchi, James Martin – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 1981
A logically and empirically valid structure of knowledge for differential calculus was made by textbook analysis and by collecting data from a first semester college calculus course. (MP)
Descriptors: Abstracts, Calculus, College Mathematics, Educational Research
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Dick, Walter – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1980
White and Gagne's method (EJ 180 555) for formatively evaluating learning hierarchies does not require participants to be taught the content prior to testing them for their knowledge of the skills in the hierarchy. By simply determining the percentage of students achieving each skill, the researcher obtains approximately the same information.…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Educational Objectives, Educational Research, High Schools
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Pavlovski, Raymond P.; And Others – American Behavioral Scientist, 1990
Experimentally examines reorganization, a fundamental component of William T. Powers' theory of mind based on the control theory of behavior. Attempts to model reorganization, focusing on improvements in performance with practice and how practice influences attention. Speculates how outputs from higher levels of the control hierarchy are involved…
Descriptors: Attention, Behavior Theories, Behavioral Science Research, Computer Simulation
Hill, Peter W. – Evaluation in Education: An International Review Series, 1984
Building on Bloom's, and subsequent educational taxonomies, a larger, synthetic, theoretical basis, called the process hierarchy theory, is developed. Its relationship to general systems theory and its metatheoretical context are described. A general methodology for empirically testing aspects of the theory using mathematical modeling is explored.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Objectives, Epistemology, Hypothesis Testing
Murphy, Gregory L.; Smith, Edward E. – 1982
Previous studies have found that an object can be categorized faster at a basic level (hammer) than at either a subordinate (club hammer) or a superordinate level (tool). While some attribute this result to basic categories having more distinctive attributes, other factors might cause this result. For example, basic categories routinely have…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Learning Theories
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Winkles, Jim – American Educational Research Journal, 1986
A mathematics learning hierarchy was developed, with examples of lateral and vertical transfer instructional treatments--achievement only, or achievement with understanding--were used with 177 eighth and ninth graders. The achievement with understanding treatment was better for lateral transfer for most students, and vertical transfer for the more…
Descriptors: Academic Ability, Comprehension, Foreign Countries, Geometry
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Bergan, John R.; Jeska, Patrick – Contemporary Educational Psychology, 1980
This study investigated the hypothesis that prerequisite skills in a seriation learning hierarchy mediate positive transfer for superordinate skills. In addition, the effect of instructional conditions involving modeling combined with variations in feedback on skill acquisition at different levels in the seriation sequence was examined.…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Concept Teaching, Feedback, Learning Theories
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Moore, David S. – Educational Theory, 1982
The hierarchical structure of the cognitive domain presented in Benjamin S. Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives does not reflect the actual nature of the learning process. Attempts to apply the classification levels to student learning in mathematics and other subjects place the taxonomy's usefulness in question. (PP)
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Objectives, Difficulty Level, Elementary Secondary Education
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