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Moos, Daniel C.; Azevedo, Roger – Metacognition and Learning, 2009
While research has documented the key role of monitoring processes during hypermedia learning, limited empirical research has used process data to examine the possibility that these processes mediate the relationship between motivational constructs (such as self-efficacy) and cognitive factors (such as prior domain knowledge) with hypermedia…
Descriptors: Education Majors, Self Efficacy, Protocol Analysis, Hypermedia
Sanabria, Federico; Thrailkill, Eric – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2009
The game of Matching Pennies (MP), a simplified version of the more popular Rock, Papers, Scissors, schematically represents competitions between organisms with incentives to predict each other's behavior. Optimal performance in iterated MP competitions involves the production of random choice patterns and the detection of nonrandomness in the…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Play, Animals, Probability
Bassey, Magnus O. – Education and Culture, 2009
Malcolm X in his autobiography claimed that every experience he had as a youth was educative. Such a claim confronts us, as educators, with a serious dilemma, that is, whether all transformations and human experiences are educative. In reviewing John Dewey's major writings on the topic, the author concludes that some of Malcolm X's early…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Educational Environment, Experiential Learning, Learning Processes
Maher, Damian – Computers & Education, 2009
The Internet is increasingly being used as a tool for communicating and learning in primary schools across many developed and developing countries. The place of social chat as part of online interactions has as yet not been fully recognised as an important component of learning. In this paper, the interactions of students in a Sydney primary…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Online Courses, Learning Processes, Computer Mediated Communication
Pizzolato, Jane Elizabeth – College Teaching, 2009
Through interviews with twenty-nine students who completed an educational psychology class that required self-study, the author investigates the relation between the amount of dissonance students experienced between their schemas for learning and the type of learning required by the course, as well as the type of knowledge the students…
Descriptors: Psychology, Interviews, Undergraduate Students, Knowledge Level
Blair, Mark R.; Watson, Marcus R.; Meier, Kimberly M. – Cognition, 2009
Learning to identify objects as members of categories is an essential cognitive skill and learning to deploy attention effectively is a core component of that process. The present study investigated an assumption imbedded in formal models of categorization: error is necessary for attentional learning. Eye-trackers were used to record participants'…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Classification, Thinking Skills, Cognitive Development
van Asselen, Marieke; Almeida, Ines; Andre, Rui; Januario, Cristina; Goncalves, Antonio Freire; Castelo-Branco, Miguel – Neuropsychologia, 2009
Implicit contextual learning refers to the ability to memorize contextual information from our environment. This contextual information can then be used to guide our attention to a specific location. Although the medial temporal lobe is important for this type of learning, the basal ganglia might also be involved considering its role in many…
Descriptors: Context Effect, Patients, Learning Processes, Brain Hemisphere Functions
Lazonder, Ard W.; Wilhelm, Pascal; van Lieburg, Emiel – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2009
This study investigated whether the mere knowledge of the meaning of variables can facilitate inquiry learning processes and outcomes. Fifty-seven college freshmen were randomly allocated to one of three inquiry tasks. The concrete task had familiar variables from which hypotheses about their underlying relations could be inferred. The…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Learning Processes, Inquiry, Educational Technology
Thom, Emily E.; Sandhofer, Catherine M. – Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 2009
This study experimentally tested the relationship between children's lexicon size and their ability to learn new words within the domain of color. We manipulated the size of 25 20-month-olds' color lexicons by training them with two, four, or six different color words over the course of eight training sessions. We subsequently tested children's…
Descriptors: Color, Training, Vocabulary, Language Acquisition
Rizvi, Fazal – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2009
In recent years, the idea of cosmopolitanism has variously been explored as a political philosophy, a moral theory and a cultural disposition. In each of these cases, this new interest in cosmopolitanism is based upon a recognition that our world is increasingly interconnected and interdependent globally, and that most of our problems are global…
Descriptors: Moral Development, Global Approach, Recognition (Psychology), Social Theories
Gourlay, Lesley – London Review of Education, 2009
Student transitions into the university are often conceived of via an apprentice-type model, or as entrance into a "community of practice". This paper disputes the applicability of these models to the indeterminate and opaque nature of student experiences of academic writing, and proposes that emotional destabilization and struggles…
Descriptors: Student Experience, College Students, Universities, Models
Benander, Ruth – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2009
Experiential learning is making meaning from direct experience. Experiential learning is used in workplace training (Silberman, 2007), and is the theoretical foundation for all practicum and co-op program learning. Supported by findings on expert/novice learning styles (Boshuizen, Bromme, and Gruber, H., 2004), this essay reflects on the practice…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Ethnography, Faculty Development, Scholarship
Akyol, Zehra; Arbaugh, J. Ben; Cleveland-Innes, Marti; Garrison, D. Randy; Ice, Phil; Richardson, Jennifer C.; Swan, Karen – Journal of Distance Education, 2009
The Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework has become a prominent model of teaching and learning in online and blended learning environments. Considerable research has been conducted which employs the framework with promising results, resulting in wide use to inform the practice of online and blended teaching and learning. For the CoI model to…
Descriptors: Teaching Models, Inquiry, Electronic Learning, Blended Learning
Labrie, Viviane; Duffy, Steven; Wang, Wei; Barger, Steven W.; Baker, Glen B.; Roder, John C. – Learning & Memory, 2009
Activation of the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) glycine site has been shown to accelerate adaptive forms of learning that may benefit psychopathologies involving cognitive and perseverative disturbances. In this study, the effects of increasing the brain levels of the endogenous NMDAR glycine site agonist D-serine, through the genetic…
Descriptors: Animals, Schizophrenia, Genetics, Memory
Burgund, E. Darcy – Cognitive Development, 2009
Repetition priming refers to the facilitation of stimulus processing due to prior processing of the same or similar stimulus, and is one of the most primitive ways in which experience and practice can affect performance. Previous studies have produced contradictory results regarding the stability of repetition priming across development. Drawing…
Descriptors: Reading Ability, Priming, Experiments, Age Differences

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