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Fulk, Barbara Mushinski – Learning Disabilities Research and Practice, 1994
This article describes instructional procedures for helping students with learning disabilities become more effective mnemonic keyword strategy users. The procedures involve providing a rationale, providing explicit strategy-attribution instruction, modeling strategy use with think-alouds, providing verbal practice, providing guided practice with…
Descriptors: Cues, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Disabilities, Learning Strategies
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Miller, Patricia H.; And Others – Cognitive Development, 1994
In memory strategy utilization deficiency, a child spontaneously produces an appropriate strategy but receives little or no benefit from it for recall. Three studies suggest two causes: children's failure to relate the task situation to their event knowledge, or to link the strategy to a second strategy, in this case linking a selective attention…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Early Childhood Education, Memorization, Metacognition
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Wang, Alvin Y.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1992
Findings from 4 experiments with a total of 218 college students, in which the retention interval for second-language vocabulary words was treated as a between-subjects factor, indicate that long-term forgetting is greater for learners instructed to use the keyword mnemonic than for learners engaged in rote rehearsal. (SLD)
Descriptors: College Students, Higher Education, Memorization, Mnemonics
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Lee, Carolyn P.; Obrzut, John E. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1994
This study investigated taxonomic clustering and use of frequency associations as features in the semantic memory of children (n=30 in grades two and six) with learning disabilities (LD). Results suggested that, when individual child-generated word lists (i.e., meaningful) are used, children with LD may not be impaired in their ability to utilize…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Classification, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education
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Wood, Eileen; Hewitt, Kathryn L. – Exceptionality: A Research Journal, 1993
Comparison of three learning strategies (elaborative interrogation, spontaneous strategy, or repetition control) with 53 high achievers in grades 5 and 6 found that both elaborative interrogation and spontaneous strategy conditions were equally effective and both were superior to the repetition condition. (DB)
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, High Achievement, Instructional Effectiveness, Intermediate Grades
Wyatt, Beverly S.; Conners, Frances A. – American Journal on Mental Retardation, 1998
Students with and without mental retardation from three age groups (ages 6-8, 10-12, and 15-17), were compared on implicit and explicit memory tasks. Students without mental retardation performed better on the explicit memory task, but there was no difference between groups on the implicit memory task. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Children, Cognitive Ability, Cognitive Processes
Cossey, Ruth – Phi Delta Kappan, 1999
The California Mathematics Standards are cynical, mind-numbing, and shallow. Instead of balancing problem solving, concept development, and skill acquisition, the standards are full of obsolete mathematics and devoid of problem solving. Students offering only an algorithm when asked for meaning have style without substance. Blind memorization is…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Elementary Secondary Education, Mathematics Curriculum, Memorization
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Greene, Gary – Learning Disabilities Research and Practice, 1999
Twenty-three elementary and middle school students with learning disabilities were taught 14 difficult-to-memorize multiplication facts with a combination of mnemonic and traditional instruction. Results indicated that mnemonic training enhanced learning and these benefits were retained over time. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Elementary Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Learning Disabilities
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Fisher, Kurt – Physics Teacher, 1999
Presents an organization of seemingly disparate convention and procedure statements and rules of basic electricity into conjugate relationships which can be used to reduce students' memorization loads and improve their understanding. (WRM)
Descriptors: Electricity, Higher Education, Learning Strategies, Memorization
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Sagarra, Nuria; Alba, Matthew – Modern Language Journal, 2006
This study investigates the effectiveness of three methods of learning vocabulary among 778 beginning second language (L2) learners. Rote memorization consists of memorizing the first language (L1) translation of a new L2 word by rehearsal. Semantic mapping displays L1 words conceptually related to the L2 word in a diagram. The keyword method…
Descriptors: Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Learning Strategies, Vocabulary Development
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Klin, Ami; Danovitch, Judith H.; Merz, Amanda B.; Volkmar, Fred R. – Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities (RPSD), 2007
Circumscribed interests are a fascinating and an understudied phenomenon in some individuals with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). Research in this area is likely to contribute to our understanding of ASDs and to advancing developmental knowledge on learning processes used to adapt to the demands of everyday social life. This study reports on a…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Verbal Learning, Social Life, Learning Processes
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Rusinek, Gabriel – Music Education Research, 2007
Although music was established as a compulsory subject in Spain by the 1990 constructivist reform, the 2002 counter-reform restricted it to lists of concepts, in a renewed encyclopaedist model for secondary schools that ignored authentic musical procedures, such as performing or composing. Contemporary adolescents, accustomed to the transmission…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Educational Change, Music
Dillon, Richard F.; Thomas, Heather – Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 1975
In two experiments using the Brown-Peterson memory paradigm, instructions to guess had small effects on recall, but sizeable effects on incidence of prior list intrustion. However, results indicate that proactive interference is primarily the result of inability to generate correct items, rather than confusion between present and previous items.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Processing, Memorization, Memory
Iaccino, James F.; And Others – 1988
Recent findings have shown that bizarre imagery can be an effective mnemonic aid when lengthy retention intervals are employed, and when the surrounding context contains more normal elements. Testing the hypothesis that an interaction exists between context and time of testing with bizarre images, a study paired 40 male and female undergraduates,…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Educational Research, Learning Processes, Learning Strategies
Rabinowitz, Mitchell – 1982
The factors underlying memory performance in learning are shown to be affected by strategic processing and by automatic processing. Strategic processing is under the conscious control and effort of the learner while automatic processing is dependent on the strength of associations between new concepts and known concepts in a given domain.…
Descriptors: Associative Learning, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, Elementary Education
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