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Charles J. Fitzsimmons; Pooja G. Sidney; Marta Mielicki; Lauren K. Schiller; Daniel A. Scheibe; Jennifer M. Taber; Percival G. Matthews; Erika A. Waters; Karin G. Coifman; Clarissa A. Thompson – Grantee Submission, 2023
Comparing health risks that include ratios of integers (e.g., 12 in 1,000) is challenging. We tested whether a worked-example intervention with number-line visual displays improved adults' risk-comparison accuracy, whether pretest confidence moderated learning, and which individual differences related to accuracy. Replicating prior work, U.S.…
Descriptors: Adult Literacy, Numeracy, Mathematics Skills, Health
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Boumi, Shahab; Vela, Adan Ernesto – Education Sciences, 2020
American universities use a procedure based on a rolling six-year graduation rate to calculate statistics regarding their students' final educational outcomes (graduating or not graduating). As an alternative to the six-year graduation rate method, many studies have applied absorbing Markov chains for estimating graduation rates. In both cases, a…
Descriptors: Graduation Rate, Computation, Markov Processes, Accuracy
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Deschênes, Michelle – International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education, 2020
Recommender systems for technology-enhanced learning are examined in relation to learners' agency, that is, their ability to define and pursue learning goals. These systems make it easier for learners to access resources, including peers with whom to learn and experts from whom to learn. In this systematic review of the literature, we apply an…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Information Systems, Decision Making, Evaluation Methods
Benton, Tom – Research Matters, 2020
This article reviews the evidence on the extent to which experts' perceptions of item difficulties, captured using comparative judgement, can predict empirical item difficulties. This evidence is drawn from existing published studies on this topic and also from statistical analysis of data held by Cambridge Assessment. Having reviewed the…
Descriptors: Test Items, Difficulty Level, Expertise, Comparative Analysis
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Kim, Min Kyu; Gaul, Cassandra J.; Kim, So Mi; Madathany, Reeny J. – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2020
While key concepts embedded within an expert's textual explanation have been considered an aspect of expert model, the complexity of textual data makes determining key concepts demanding and time consuming. To address this issue, we developed Student Mental Model Analyzer for Teaching and Learning (SMART) technology that can analyze an experts'…
Descriptors: Natural Language Processing, Educational Technology, Concept Mapping, Accuracy
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Rodriguez, Dario N.; Berry, Melissa A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Counterfactual thinking is a form of mental simulation that informs causal judgments regarding the role antecedent events played in producing present outcomes. We examined whether inducing participants to think counterfactually about a case involving eyewitness evidence would sensitize them to variations in eyewitness evidence quality.…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Evaluative Thinking, Logical Thinking, Evidence
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Cabalo, Donna Gift; Ianì, Francesco; Bilge, A. Reyyan; Mazzoni, Giuliana – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
In the present study, the persistence of personal false memories (FMs) after social feedback that denies their truth was assessed. Participants imitated actions performed by the experimenter ("Session 1") and watched a doctored video with performed and critical "fake" actions ("Session 2"), followed by a memory rating…
Descriptors: Memory, Deception, Recall (Psychology), Persistence
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McCall, Martin; Kinsler, Paul; Tymms, Vijay – Physics Teacher, 2020
In many high school teaching materials the force on a current-carrying wire in a magnetic field is discussed using an idea based on a so-called "catapult field" (cf. Fig. 1), an engaging depiction of magnetic forces, albeit one which, to the best of our knowledge, has neither been used in college-level educational material or scrutinized…
Descriptors: High School Students, Instructional Materials, Magnets, Physics
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Jaeger, Antônio; Queiroz, Morgana C.; Selmeczy, Diana; Dobbins, Ian G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2020
During recognition memory decisions, external hints or cues alter the accuracy and confidence of correct rejections (valid > uncued > invalid). In contrast, although hits show analogous accuracy effects, hit confidence remains largely unaffected by cue validity. Prior research suggested this confidence validity dissociation (CVD) may depend…
Descriptors: Recognition (Psychology), Cues, Accuracy, Validity
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Das, Syaamantak; Mandal, Shyamal Kumar Das; Basu, Anupam – Contemporary Educational Technology, 2020
Cognitive learning complexity identification of assessment questions is an essential task in the domain of education, as it helps both the teacher and the learner to discover the thinking process required to answer a given question. Bloom's Taxonomy cognitive levels are considered as a benchmark standard for the classification of cognitive…
Descriptors: Classification, Difficulty Level, Test Items, Identification
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Harvey, Alistair J.; Shrimpton, Braden; Azzopardi, Zoe; O'Grady, Katherine; Hicks, Emily; Hirst, Emily; Atkinson-Cox, Keenan – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
In this quasi-experimental field study, bar drinkers (0.00-0.23% blood alcohol content) viewed a photographic sequence in which a male took a laptop from a helpdesk assistant, either on loan or at gunpoint. Following a brief retention period, participants answered 20 multiple-choice questions about the male, his actions, and details of the scene,…
Descriptors: Drinking, Alcohol Abuse, Weapons, Crime
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Baker-Ward, Lynne; Tyler, Caroline Staneck; Coffman, Jennifer L.; Merritt, Kathy A.; Ornstein, Peter A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
This investigation extended work on the linkage between knowledge and remembering by exploring the relation between generic and episodic memory representations. Thirty 6-year-old children experienced a mock physical examination with some expected components omitted and other unexpected actions included. Immediately and again after 12 weeks, the…
Descriptors: Young Children, Expectation, Memory, Physical Examinations
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Chen, Chia-Wen; Wang, Wen-Chung; Chiu, Ming Ming; Ro, Sage – Journal of Educational Measurement, 2020
The use of computerized adaptive testing algorithms for ranking items (e.g., college preferences, career choices) involves two major challenges: unacceptably high computation times (selecting from a large item pool with many dimensions) and biased results (enhanced preferences or intensified examinee responses because of repeated statements across…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Adaptive Testing, Test Items, Selection
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Jackson, Benjamin A.; Harshman, Jordan; Miliordos, Evangelos – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
The concept of an atom with an expanded octet, known as hypervalency, has persisted in the general chemistry curriculum, despite abundant theoretical work disputing its veracity. Here, the electronic structure of traditionally hypervalent molecules (H[subscript 2]SO[subscript 3], H[subscript 2]SO[subscript 4], PF[subscript 5], and SF[subscript 6])…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Molecular Structure, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts
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Silawi, Razan; Shalhoub-Awwad, Yasmin; Prior, Anat – Language Learning, 2020
This study examined the monitoring abilities of trilinguals in reading comprehension, addressing the following questions: Is comprehension monitoring related to reading comprehension across first, second, and third languages? Is comprehension monitoring shared across the languages of trilingual adults (domain-general) or rather linked to language…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Multilingualism, Reading Comprehension, Language Proficiency
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