Publication Date
| In 2026 | 0 |
| Since 2025 | 140 |
| Since 2022 (last 5 years) | 771 |
| Since 2017 (last 10 years) | 1841 |
| Since 2007 (last 20 years) | 3333 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
| Tatsuoka, Kikumi K. | 21 |
| Catran, Jack | 20 |
| Al-Jarf, Reima | 11 |
| Courville, Troy | 10 |
| Dodd, Barbara | 10 |
| Pine, Julian M. | 10 |
| Treiman, Rebecca | 10 |
| Borasi, Raffaella | 8 |
| Bray, Melissa A. | 8 |
| Dell, Gary S. | 8 |
| Pan, Xingyu | 8 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
| Practitioners | 209 |
| Teachers | 148 |
| Researchers | 139 |
| Policymakers | 29 |
| Administrators | 22 |
| Students | 13 |
| Counselors | 1 |
| Media Staff | 1 |
Location
| Turkey | 118 |
| China | 80 |
| Australia | 67 |
| Germany | 67 |
| Canada | 65 |
| Saudi Arabia | 53 |
| Spain | 49 |
| Indonesia | 48 |
| Japan | 42 |
| United Kingdom | 42 |
| South Africa | 39 |
| More ▼ | |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
| Meets WWC Standards without Reservations | 1 |
| Meets WWC Standards with or without Reservations | 1 |
| Does not meet standards | 1 |
Ayvazo, Shiri; Ward, Phillip – Physical Educator, 2009
This investigation examined the effects of Classwide Peer Tutoring (CWPT), a variation of peer tutoring on the volleyball skills of four 6th grade middle school students purposefully selected from an intact class of 21 students. Participants were average to low skilled males and females. A single subject A-B-A-B withdrawal design was used to…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Middle Schools, Team Sports, Grade 6
Ramos, Erica; Alfonso, Vincent C.; Schermerhorn, Susan M. – Psychology in the Schools, 2009
The interpretation of cognitive test scores often leads to decisions concerning the diagnosis, educational placement, and types of interventions used for children. Therefore, it is important that practitioners administer and score cognitive tests without error. This study assesses the frequency and types of examiner errors that occur during the…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, Cognitive Tests, Scoring, Cognitive Ability
Lee, Sun-Hee; Jang, Seok Bae; Seo, Sang-Kyu – CALICO Journal, 2009
In this study, we focus on particle errors and discuss an annotation scheme for Korean learner corpora that can be used to extract heuristic patterns of particle errors efficiently. We investigate different properties of particle errors so that they can be later used to identify learner errors automatically, and we provide resourceful annotation…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Error Patterns, Korean, Computational Linguistics
Idzinga, J. C.; de Jong, A. L.; van den Bemt, P. M. L. A. – Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 2009
Background: Previous studies, both in hospitals and in institutions for clients with an intellectual disability (ID), have shown that medication errors at the administration stage are frequent, especially when medication has to be administered through an enteral feeding tube. In hospitals a specially designed intervention programme has proven to…
Descriptors: Intervention, Mental Retardation, Hospitals, Nurses
Mechling, Linda C.; Gustafson, Melissa – Exceptionality, 2009
This study compared the effects of static photographs and video prompts on the independent performance of cooking related tasks by six young adults with moderate intellectual disabilities. An adapted alternating treatment design with baseline and final treatment phase was used to measure the percentage of tasks correctly completed by each student…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Prompting, Young Adults, Visual Stimuli
Gressang, Jane E. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
Second language (L2) learners notoriously have trouble using articles in their target languages (e.g., "a", "an", "the" in English). However, researchers disagree about the patterns and causes of these errors. Past studies have found that L2 English learners: (1) Predominantly omit articles (White 2003, Robertson 2000), (2) Overuse "the" (Huebner…
Descriptors: Semantics, Nouns, Morphemes, Second Language Learning
Liao, Ern-Huei – ProQuest LLC, 2010
The problem. The purpose of this study is to investigate positive and negative cross-linguistic transfer on EFL learners' phraseological competence in collocations and its relationship to learners' linguistic proficiency. Method. A quantitative study was conducted. Two instruments, multiple choice test and grammaticality judgment test, were…
Descriptors: Multiple Choice Tests, English (Second Language), Language Acquisition, Language Proficiency
Eppinger, Ben; Kray, Jutta; Mock, Barbara; Mecklinger, Axel – Neuropsychologia, 2008
This study examined age differences in error processing and reinforcement learning. We were interested in whether the electrophysiological correlates of error processing, the error-related negativity (ERN) and the feedback-related negativity (FRN), reflect learning-related changes in younger and older adults. To do so, we applied a probabilistic…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Older Adults, Age Differences, Reinforcement
Masterson, Jackie; Druks, Judit; Gallienne, Donna – Journal of Child Language, 2008
The objectives were to explore the often reported noun advantage in children's language acquisition using a picture naming paradigm and to explore the variables that affect picture naming performance. Participants in Experiment 1 were aged three and five years, and in Experiment 2, five years. The stimuli were action and object pictures. In…
Descriptors: Nouns, Verbs, Language Acquisition, Child Language
Lunsford, Andrea A.; Lunsford, Karen J. – College Composition and Communication, 2008
This essay reports on a study of first-year student writing. Based on a stratified national sample, the study attempts to replicate research conducted twenty-two years ago and to chart the changes that have taken place in student writing since then. The findings suggest that papers are longer, employ different genres, and contain new error…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Writing (Composition), Grammar, Error Patterns
Athy, Jeremy; Friedrich, Jeff; Delany, Eileen – Science & Education, 2008
Egon Brunswik (1903-1955) first made an interesting distinction between perception and explicit reasoning, arguing that perception included quick estimates of an object's size, nearly always resulting in good approximations in uncertain environments, whereas explicit reasoning, while better at achieving exact estimates, could often fail by wide…
Descriptors: Psychology, Logical Thinking, Perception, Psychological Studies
Savalei, Victoria – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2008
Normal theory maximum likelihood (ML) is by far the most popular estimation and testing method used in structural equation modeling (SEM), and it is the default in most SEM programs. Even though this approach assumes multivariate normality of the data, its use can be justified on the grounds that it is fairly robust to the violations of the…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Testing, Factor Analysis, Maximum Likelihood Statistics
Kramarski, Bracha; Zoldan, Sarit – Journal of Educational Research, 2008
The authors examined effects of 3 metacognitive approaches and 1 control group on mathematical reasoning, conceptual errors, and metacognitive knowledge. The metacognitive approaches were (a) diagnosing errors (DIA), (b) improvement via self-questioning (IMP), and (c) a combined approach (DIA+IMP). Controls (CONT) received no metacognitive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Control Groups, Metacognition, Teaching Methods
Roberts, James S. – Applied Psychological Measurement, 2008
Orlando and Thissen (2000) developed an item fit statistic for binary item response theory (IRT) models known as S-X[superscript 2]. This article generalizes their statistic to polytomous unfolding models. Four alternative formulations of S-X[superscript 2] are developed for the generalized graded unfolding model (GGUM). The GGUM is a…
Descriptors: Item Response Theory, Goodness of Fit, Test Items, Models
Pagliuca, Giovanni; Arduino, Lisa S.; Barca, Laura; Burani, Cristina – Language and Cognitive Processes, 2008
This is the first study that reports the lexicality effect (i.e., words read better than nonwords) in Italian with fully transparent and methodologically well-controlled stimuli. We investigated how words and nonwords are read aloud in the Italian transparent orthography, in which there is an almost strict one-to-one correspondence between…
Descriptors: Word Recognition, Reading Skills, Italian, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence

Peer reviewed
Direct link
