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Johnstone, Christopher; Thurlow, Martha; Moore, Michael; Altman, Jason – National Center on Educational Outcomes, University of Minnesota, 2006
The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) and other recent changes in federal legislation have placed greater emphasis on accountability in large-scale testing. Included in this emphasis are regulations that require assessments to be accessible. States are accountable for the success of all students, and tests should be designed in a way that…
Descriptors: Measurement, Outcomes of Education, Inferences, Federal Legislation
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Cleary, Timothy J.; Zimmerman, Barry J. – Psychology in the Schools, 2006
The current study examined special education teachers' ratings of the usefulness of strategy microanalytic assessment (SMA) (i.e., self-regulation, strategy use) and standardized norm-referenced assessment information (SNRA) (i.e., cognitive and academic skills). Ninety-six participants separately rated the frequency with which SMA and SNRA are…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Special Education Teachers, Academic Achievement, Teacher Surveys
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Coleman, M. Nicole – Journal of Multicultural Counseling and Development, 2006
This study examined critical incidents in graduate students' multicultural counseling training. Trainees (N=59) were asked to describe a critical incident and their multicultural training environment by responding to a critical incident protocol and the multicultural environment Inventory-Revised (D. B. Pope-Davis, W. M. Liu, J. Nevitt, & R. L.…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Multicultural Education, Cultural Pluralism, Critical Incidents Method
Triska, Olive H.; And Others – 1997
A study was conducted to determine whether competently reasoning clinicians (clinical instructors in medical instruction) could identify reasons competently reasoning students would eliminate distractors, and explain how students would reason to select the keyed response when solving multiple-choice items. The think-aloud protocols of clinicians…
Descriptors: Distractors (Tests), Higher Education, Medical Education, Multiple Choice Tests
Lockhead, Jack – 1989
This paper describes the implications of constructivism both for what to teach and for how to teach. The first part discusses three approaches on what to teach: (1) relating mathematical knowledge to other knowledge; (2) checking for self-consistency; and (3) putting thinking before facts. The second part is on how to teach based on…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching, Higher Education
Baumann, James F.; And Others – 1993
A think-aloud instructional program was developed to help students acquire the ability to monitor their reading comprehension and to employ various strategies to deal with comprehension breakdowns. Several research studies indicate that comprehension monitoring abilities discriminate successful readers from less successful ones and that…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Students, Instructional Effectiveness, Lesson Plans
Korpi, Margaret K.; And Others – 1991
Processes of solving an ill-structured problem were studied. Eight individuals (recent graduates and participants in a teacher education program) learned about a fictitious vehicle, and then designed instruction about it. The individuals were relative novices in instructional design, because of a small amount of professional training in the…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Cognitive Processes, Educational Strategies, Higher Education
Carey, L. J.; Flower, Linda – 1989
This report examines the composing processes of expert writers to determine which cognitive processes in expository writing produce an opportunity for a creative response. The first section considers how the ill-defined nature of many writing problems and the cognitive processes experts use to solve these problems interact to provide an…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Case Studies, Cognitive Processes, Expository Writing
Ehlinger, Jeanne – 1989
A study examined whether students were able to transfer the learning of a modeled "think-aloud" strategy to comprehension monitoring in other learning situations. Sixty-four eighth grade students in a midwestern town were identified as average proficiency readers based on a cloze test. There were no significant differences among the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Grade 8, Junior High Schools, Learning Strategies
Nagy, Philip – 1990
This study assesses the ability of schema theory to address ill-structured problems without becoming unwieldy. Prior to addressing the study proper, the paper reviews the literature on memory for complex phenomena, ill-structured problems, expert-novice differences, administration as problem solving, and assessment of complex learning outcomes.…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Case Studies, Elementary Education, Foreign Countries
White, Barbara Y.; Frederiksen, John R. – 1986
This report discusses the importance of presenting qualitative, causally consistent models in the initial stages of learning so that students can gain an understanding of basic electrical circuit concepts and principles that builds on their preexisting ways of reasoning about physical phenomena, and it argues that tutoring environments must help…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Cognitive Processes, Electric Circuits, Experiential Learning
Norris, Stephen P. – 1988
The problems of validity and fairness involved in multiple-choice critical thinking tests can be lessened by using verbal reports of examinees' thinking during the process of developing such tests in order to retain only those items which rely on critical thinking skills to obtain the correct answer. Multiple-choice testing can lead to unfair…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, High School Students, High Schools, Multiple Choice Tests
Sitko, Barbara M. – 1989
Contributing to research delineating the cognitive processes of writers who are revising their own texts after feedback from members of their intended audience, a study (1) determined whether more able writers would be more responsive to their readers' feedback than would less able writers; and (2) verified results of a previous study indicating a…
Descriptors: Audience Response, Feedback, Grade 11, Grade 12
Kantz, Margaret J. – 1989
When students write syntheses in response to a rhetorical task, does the rhetorical nature of the task exert some special influence on the students' composing processes? How do these processes differ? Three case studies, quantitative analyses of papers written by seventeen undergraduates, and a tentative model of a synthesizing process address…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Creative Writing, Discourse Analysis, Higher Education
Henry, Laurie – 2003
The reading comprehension program described in this lesson introduces the components of think-alouds and text interactions, and helps students to develop the ability to use think-alouds to aid in reading comprehension tasks. During two 45-minute lessons, students will: explore the use of the think-aloud strategy; vocalize interactions with texts;…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Junior High Schools, Lesson Plans, National Standards
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