32,314 results on '"Comprehension"'
Search Results
2. Interpretation of the p value: A national survey study in academic psychologists from Spain.
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Badenes-Ribera L, Frías-Navarro D, Monterde-i-Bort H, and Pascual-Soler M
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- Comprehension, Female, Humans, Logic, Male, Spain, Surveys and Questionnaires, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Faculty psychology, Probability, Psychology
- Abstract
Background: Incorrect interpretations of p values affect professionals’ decisions and jeopardize the quality of psychological interventions and the accumulation of valid scientific knowledge. This study analyzes the errors made by Spanish academic psychologists in interpreting p values., Method: We surveyed academic psychologists about their interpretations of p values. The sample is composed of 418 academic psychologists from Spanish public universities. The mean number of years working as a university professor is 14.16 (SD = 9.39)., Results: Our findings suggest that many academic psychologists do not know how to correctly interpret p values. The inverse probability fallacy presents the greatest comprehension problems. Methodology instructors also interpret the significance of the p value erroneously., Conclusions: These results highlight the importance of the statistical re-education of professors.
- Published
- 2015
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3. I Think I Was Wrong: The Effect of Making Experimental Predictions When Learning about Theories from Psychology Textbook Excerpts
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Guerrero, Tricia A., Griffin, Thomas D., and Wiley, Jennifer
- Abstract
Students often struggle with developing understanding from expository science texts. This study explored whether training students to engage in a POE (Predict-Observe-Explain) study strategy might be beneficial when learning from texts that introduce theories by describing experiments and empirical results, a common style in social science textbooks. The main questions tested in this experiment were if training students how to use a POE study strategy while reading textbook excerpts would support better comprehension and comprehension monitoring outcomes when students engaged in future learning attempts for an introductory psychology class. In one condition students were trained to use the POE study strategy, while in a comparison condition students were simply trained to use an explanation study strategy. Analyses suggested that students in the POE strategy training condition may have become preoccupied with whether or not their experimental predictions were correct, prohibiting them from engaging with the POE strategy as intended. Although both POE and explanation strategy training helped students to improve their comprehension monitoring on a new set of texts, students in the explanation condition displayed better comprehension on those new texts than students in the POE condition.
- Published
- 2022
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4. Understanding the Learning Challenges of English-Medium Instruction Learners and Ways to Facilitate Their Learning: A Case Study of Taiwan Psychology Students' Perspectives
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Hua, Tzu-Ling
- Abstract
English-medium instruction (EMI) has become a global education phenomenon in recent decades, especially in higher education. However, its implementation is still facing criticism. On the one hand, learners are welcoming the envisaged benefits of preparing them with professional content knowledge and English language proficiency to compete in the new global economy; on the other hand, they are reluctant to take the courses because of the challenges and difficulties EMI creates. Meanwhile, EMI lecturers are concerned about students' inability to survive, or better still thrive through EMI learning. EMI lecturers are expert in their professional domain but are not trained or prepared to teach EMI courses yet. This qualitative study examines the perception of first-year undergraduate students taking the EMI foundation psychology course in Taiwan, focusing on their perspectives of factors facilitating or hindering their EMI learning, and their suggestions for improving the situation. The results not only point out what kinds of teaching practice contribute to challenges for EMI learners in their learning process, but also the underlying reasons and the pedagogy practice that students suggest can be used to improve the situation. Insights provided by this study can be used to assist EMI lecturers in examining their own pedagogical practice and expand their knowledgeability about pedagogy. They can also be used as a way forward for assisting in the development of EMI teacher training and professional development, and the implementation of EMI.
- Published
- 2019
5. Psychological Applications and Trends 2019
- Author
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Pracana, Clara and Wang, Michael
- Abstract
This book contains a compilation of papers presented at the International Psychological Applications Conference and Trends (InPACT) 2019, organized by the World Institute for Advanced Research and Science (W.I.A.R.S.). Modern psychology offers a large range of scientific fields where it can be applied. The goal of understanding individuals and groups (mental functions and behavioral standpoints), from this academic and practical scientific discipline, aims ultimately to benefit society. The International Conference seeks to provide some answers and explore the several areas within the Psychology field, new developments in studies and proposals for future scientific projects. The goal is to offer a worldwide connection between psychologists, researchers and lecturers, from a wide range of academic fields, interested in exploring and giving their contribution in psychological issues. We take pride in having been able to connect and bring together academics, scholars, practitioners and others interested in a field that is fertile in new perspectives, ideas and knowledge. We counted on an extensive variety of contributors and presenters, which can supplement the view of the human essence and behavior, showing the impact of their different personal, academic and cultural experiences. This is, certainly, one of the reasons there are nationalities and cultures represented, inspiring multi-disciplinary collaborative links, fomenting intellectual encounter and development. InPACT 2019 received 322 submissions, from more than 35 different countries from all over the world, reviewed by a double-blind process. Submissions were prepared to take form of Oral Presentations, Posters, Virtual Presentations and Workshops. 107 submissions (overall, 33% acceptance rate) were accepted for presentation in the conference. The conference also included: (1) One keynote presentation by Prof. Dr. Glenys Parry (PhD, CPsychol, FBPsS, Emeritus Professor, School of Health & Related Research, University of Sheffield, United Kingdom). (2) Two Special Talks, one by Prof. Dr. Michael Wang (Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology, University of Leicester, United Kingdom), and the other by Prof. Dr. Luís Delgado (Applied Psychology Research Center Capabilities and Inclusion (APPsyCI) -- University Institute, Portugal). We would like to express our gratitude to all our invitees. The Conference addresses different categories inside Applied Psychology area and papers fit broadly into one of the named themes and sub-themes. The conference program includes six main broad-ranging categories that cover diversified interest areas: (1) Clinical Psychology: Emotions and related psychological processes; Assessment; Psychotherapy and counseling; Addictive behaviors; Eating disorders; Personality disorders; Quality of life and mental health; Communication within relationships; Services of mental health; and Psychopathology. (2) Educational Psychology: Language and cognitive processes; School environment and childhood disorders; Parenting and parenting related processes; Learning and technology; Psychology in schools; Intelligence and creativity; Motivation in classroom; Perspectives on teaching; Assessment and evaluation; and Individual differences in learning. (3) Social Psychology: Cross-cultural dimensions of mental disorders; Employment issues and training; Organizational psychology; Psychology in politics and international issues; Social factors in adolescence and its development; Social anxiety and self-esteem; Immigration and social policy; Self-efficacy and identity development; Parenting and social support; Addiction and stigmatization; and Psychological and social impact of virtual networks. (4) Legal Psychology: Violence and trauma; Mass-media and aggression; Intra-familial violence; Juvenile delinquency; Aggressive behavior in childhood; Internet offending; Working with crime perpetrators; Forensic psychology; Violent risk assessment; and Law enforcement and stress. (5) Cognitive and Experimental Psychology: Perception, memory and attention; Decision making and problem-solving; Concept formation, reasoning and judgment; Language processing; Learning skills and education; Cognitive Neuroscience; Computer analogies and information processing (Artificial Intelligence and computer simulations); Social and cultural factors in the cognitive approach; Experimental methods, research and statistics; and Biopsychology. (6) Psychoanalysis and Psychoanalytical Psychotherapy: Psychoanalysis and psychology; The unconscious; The Oedipus complex; Psychoanalysis of children; Pathological mourning; Addictive personalities; Borderline organizations; Narcissistic personalities; Anxiety and phobias; Psychosis; Neuropsychoanalysis. This book contains the results of the different researches conducted by authors who focused on what they are passionate about: to study and develop research in areas related to Psychology and its applications. It includes an extensive variety of contributors and presenters that are hereby sharing with us their different personal, academic and cultural experiences. We would like to thank all the authors and participants, the members of the academic scientific committee, and of course, to the organizing and administration team for making and putting this conference together. [These proceedings were published by InScience Press. Abstract modified to meet ERIC guidelines. For the 2018 proceedings, see ED604953.]
- Published
- 2019
6. Developing school psychologists as agents of social justice: a qualitative analysis of student understanding across three years.
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Moy GE, Briggs A, Shriberg D, Furrey KJ, Smith P, and Tompkins N
- Subjects
- Focus Groups, Humans, Comprehension, Psychology, Schools, Social Justice, Students
- Abstract
This study employed a cohort-sequential design with four cohorts over 3 years to investigate school psychology graduate trainees' (n=37) understanding of social justice. Using consensual qualitative research methods, participants' perspectives on social justice writ large, social justice as it applies to school psychology, and effective aspects of social justice training in their graduate training program were collected through semi-structured focus group interviews. Field-based training though service-learning in diverse communities provided trainees with exposure to experiences that were viewed as instrumental in their understanding of social justice in general and as it applies to school psychology. Trainees described aspects of the training program that were viewed as conducive to educating school psychologists as agents of social justice. Based on findings from the study, a descriptive model of school psychology training for social justice is proposed., (Copyright © 2014 Society for the Study of School Psychology. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2014
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7. The Role of Graphics in Video Lectures
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Bianchi, Laura J. and Risko, Evan F.
- Abstract
With the increase in online course use (Allen & Seaman, 2017), there is an increasing need to determine the most effective (i.e., the most conducive for learning) way to present lectures online (e.g., video lectures). Lecture graphics that are interesting but extraneous to the content (e.g., a celebrity), have been shown to impair comprehension of the material, likely resulting from an increase in cognitive load. In this study, the use of graphics on the slides of an online psychology lecture was manipulated to determine the extent to which images can improve (or impair) comprehension as well as the effect it may have on intentional and unintentional mind-wandering. Across our two experiments, we demonstrate no differences across conditions (i.e., unnecessary graphics, relevant graphics, no graphics) in overall comprehension and limited differences in mind wandering behavior.
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- 2022
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8. The Effect of the Textbook Written According to the Principles of Prose Learning on the Student Achievement = Metinden ögrenme ilkelerine göre hazirlanan ders kitabinin ögrenci erisisine etkisi
- Author
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Yalçin, Ayse Saba
- Abstract
The main purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of the textbook written according to the principles of prose learning on the student achievement. Pre-test - post-test controlled group design was used in the study. The study was conducted on 3 groups, each composed of 38 2nd grade medical vocational high school students. "Impact" is limited by the didactic quality of two separate sections of the psychology textbook and it was practiced with the traditional text book and the textbook which is organized in two separate ways as including questions and not. The data were analysed by one-way analysis of variance and t test. It was determined that there is a significant difference in favour of the group who studied the textbook with questions prepared according to the principles of prose learning compared to the group which the traditional textbook was implemented in terms of total achievements regarding knowledge, comprehension and practice levels and retention of the learned knowledge within the cognitive domain.
- Published
- 2018
9. Learning to think iconically in the human and social sciences: iconic standards of understanding as a pivotal challenge for method development.
- Author
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Przyborski A and Slunecko T
- Subjects
- Comprehension, Emblems and Insignia, Humans, Knowledge, Philosophy, Communications Media, Concept Formation, Psychology, Social Sciences, Symbolism
- Abstract
Theoretically as well as alongside an empirical research idea, this paper outlines conditions for the development of social scientific empirical methods able to further exploit the iconic potential of the image. Reconstructing the role of formal pictorial elements for the standards of understanding within the medium "image" is considered pivotal in this endeavor. Within the context of language, standards of communication have already been extensively researched. The linguistic format of the narrative, for instance, is well studied. Up to now, though, comparable formal vehicles of iconic semantics have only been examined in aesthetics and art history. Nevertheless, standards of iconic understanding are part of our implicit knowledge, are incessantly in use in everyday practice and, thus, the basis of everyday identity formation. With the help of empirical methods based on an iconic logos we can deepen our understanding of orientations, longings, and anxieties of our time that are often silently conveyed by images. Fashion will be outlined as a prototypical field, in which an empirically based development of such methods might start off.
- Published
- 2012
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10. The usefulness of retrieval practice and review-only practice for answering conceptually related test questions.
- Author
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Pilotti M, Chodorow M, and Petrov R
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- Adolescent, Adult, Comprehension, Educational Measurement methods, Female, Humans, Male, Psychometrics, Recognition, Psychology, Self-Assessment, Students psychology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Young Adult, Concept Formation, Educational Measurement statistics & numerical data, Mental Recall, Practice, Psychological, Psychology education
- Abstract
In a simulated last-minute test preparation scenario, the authors examined the extent to which practice can influence accuracy of self-assessment, overall test performance, and memory of a familiar knowledge domain. They simulated test preparation by exposing students to practice questions, allegedly from a study guide. The test preparation consisted of either answering questions (retrieval practice) and then checking the correctness of the answers or reviewing questions along with their answers (review-only practice). Immediately after either form of practice, students took a test with questions whose content was conceptually related to the practice test questions. In this study, both forms of practice had a beneficial effect on self-assessment prior to the test and on overall test performance. When the authors examined specific memory responses, they found practice to benefit the frequency of correct responses that students defined as experiences of remembering and knowing. The effect of practice was not modulated by the recency of the acquisition of the domain being tested (at least within the time span of an academic semester).
- Published
- 2009
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11. [Interpretation mistakes in statistical methods: their importance and some recommendations].
- Author
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Monterde i Bort H, Pascual Llobel J, and Frías Navarro MD
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- Adult, Comprehension, Culture, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Theoretical, Probability, Psychology education, Psychometrics methods, Reproducibility of Results, Sample Size, Surveys and Questionnaires, Data Interpretation, Statistical, Faculty statistics & numerical data, Psychology statistics & numerical data, Psychometrics statistics & numerical data, Research Personnel psychology
- Abstract
Interpretation mistakes in statistical methods: Their importance and some recommendations. Prior research has identified some of the most common misconceptions on how researchers interpret the results of significance tests. In this study, we examine the scope of these misconceptions in a sample of university professors and researchers from Spain on the basis of a short questionnaire. The obtained results provide important information: i) to prevent wrong interpretation from the data, ii) to correct the wrong use of statistical testing, iii) to suggest new ways of examining the data, and iv) to propose some modifications on the editorial criteria to publish scientific work.
- Published
- 2006
12. Learning the Psychology of the Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomenon through On-Line Practice
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Ruiz, Marcos and Contreras, María José
- Abstract
Psychology undergraduates can benefit from direct experiences with laboratory procedures of psychological phenomena. However, they are not always available for students within a distance education program. The present study included students from the Spanish National Distance Education University (UNED) that were to take part in a Basic Psychology examination session. They participated in web-sessions on a tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) laboratory procedure. The aim was to study whether their performance at TOT-related items would be differentially improved. Our results support the conclusion that practicing with the TOT application was effective in improving the TOT comprehension among students. Study A showed that the performance level was higher for the TOT-practiced participants relative to the non-practiced ones. Study B showed significant group by item-type interaction. Also, there was a significant effect of group, and item-type. The results are contextualized in the psychological institutions' mainstream effort for Psychology to be viewed as a STEM discipline by students, the political representatives, and the society.
- Published
- 2017
13. Participants' understanding of the process of psychological research: debriefing.
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Brody JL, Gluck JP, and Aragon AS
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- Cognition, Comprehension, Data Collection, Deception, Disclosure, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Humans, New Mexico, Research Personnel, Students, Universities, Attitude, Behavioral Research, Human Experimentation, Psychology, Research, Research Subjects
- Abstract
In a broad-based study of experiences in psychological research, 65 undergraduates participating in a wide range of psychological experiments were interviewed in depth. Overall findings demonstrated that participants hold varying views, with only 32% of participants characterizing their experiences as completely positive. Participants' descriptions of their debriefing experiences suggest substantial variability in the content, format, and general quality of debriefing practices. Just over 40% of the debriefing experiences were viewed favorably. Positive debriefing experiences were described as including a thorough explanation of the study and detailed information concerning the broader relevance of the experiment to the field of psychology. The most common complaint, characterizing 28.8% of the responses, was that the debriefing was unclear and that insufficient information was provided. Participants' views of psychological research and the discipline of psychology were also elicited. Results are discussed in terms of ethical and methodological implications.
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- 2000
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14. Participants' understanding of the process of psychological research: informed consent.
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Brody JL, Gluck JP, and Aragon AS
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- Attitude, Coercion, Cognition, Communication, Comprehension, Consent Forms, Data Collection, Deception, Disclosure, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Freedom, History, Humans, Personal Autonomy, Risk, Risk Assessment, Scientific Misconduct, Behavioral Research, Human Experimentation, Informed Consent, Psychology, Research, Research Subjects, Students, Universities
- Abstract
Sixty-five undergraduates participating in a wide range of psychological research experiments were interviewed in depth about their research experiences and their views on the process of informed consent. Overall, 32% of research experiences were characterized positively and 41% were characterized negatively. One major theme of the negative experiences was that experiments were perceived as too invasive, suggesting incomplete explication of negative aspects of research during the informed consent process. Informed consent experiences were viewed positively 80% of the time. However, most of the participants had a limited view of the purpose of informed consent: less than 20% viewed the process as a decision point. Results suggest a number of common pitfalls to standard informed consent practices that have not generally been recognized. Results are discussed in terms of both ethical and methodological implications. Suggestions for improving the informed consent process are also provided.
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- 1997
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15. Children's capacity to agree to psychological research: knowledge of risks and benefits and voluntariness.
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Abramovitch R, Freedman JL, Henry K, and Van Brunschot M
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- Canada, Coercion, Empirical Research, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Human Experimentation, Humans, Parent-Child Relations, Research Subjects, Researcher-Subject Relations, Risk, Risk Assessment, Behavioral Research, Child, Cognition, Comprehension, Informed Consent, Mental Competency, Psychology, Research
- Abstract
A series of studies investigated the capacity of children between the ages of 7 and 12 to give free and informed consent to participation in psychological research. Children were reasonably accurate in describing the purpose of studies, but many did not understand the possible benefits or especially the possible risks of participating. In several studies children's consent was not affected by the knowledge that their parents had given their permission or by the parents saying that they would not be upset if the children refused. In contrast, other studies found that children were much more likely to stop their participation if the experimenter said explicitly that she would not be upset if they stopped. We suggest that experimenters should pay more attention to describing the possible risks and benefits of participation in research, and that they should also make it clearer to children that they are free to stop once they have begun.
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- 1995
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16. The limits of empirical studies on research ethics.
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Tancredi LR
- Subjects
- Aged, Cognition, Commitment of Mentally Ill, Comprehension, Dangerous Behavior, Decision Making, Dementia, Epidemiology, Expert Testimony, Freedom, Health Personnel, Humans, Informed Consent, Jurisprudence, Mental Health, Mental Recall, Patient Care, Personal Autonomy, Persons with Mental Disabilities, Philosophy, Prisoners, Probability, Professional-Patient Relations, Psychiatry, Researcher-Subject Relations, Risk, Risk Assessment, Science, Social Dominance, Social Sciences, Socioeconomic Factors, Treatment Refusal, Uncertainty, Behavioral Research, Empirical Research, Forensic Psychiatry, Mental Competency, Mental Disorders, Psychology, Research, Research Design, Research Personnel, Social Values
- Abstract
The results of empirical research in psychology and psychiatry are increasingly being used to formulate as well as understand problems at the interface of law and psychiatry. There has been a proliferation of studies, such as the determinants of individual competence or threat to self or others, the results of which are influencing policy and legislative decisions as well as buttressing holdings in court cases. In this article, I explore the issues of interpretation of epidemiological studies, particularly the role of ideological positions on the design and results of empirical findings, the importance of the way data are interpreted, and the role of ideologies in the way research findings are presented to provide support for policy positions. Two levels of analysis are involved in determining the validity of a study. The first addresses the questions of whether the study meets the statistical and epidemiological requirements for reliable results. These include considerations such as the appropriateness of the study design and methods for gathering and interpreting data. The second focuses on the underlying framework of the study. This involves factors such as the perspectives and values of those conducting the study, the explicit and implicit dominating ideologies where they operate, and the extent to which the study is constructed to reaffirm specific ideologies. This level of analysis is essential for disclosing the influences of ideologies on the results of studies and the way in which data are interpreted. In this article, I try to demonstrate through critiques of selected studies that the first stage of analysis is insufficient without an examination of underlying preconceived values to establish the meaningfulness of results.
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- 1995
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17. Legal and ethical issues concerning children's rights of consent.
- Author
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Hesson K, Bakal D, and Dobson KS
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- Age Factors, Canada, Child, Civil Rights, Cognition, Comprehension, Decision Making, Ethics, Professional, Freedom, Health Personnel, Humans, Mental Competency, Mentally Ill Persons, Parental Consent, Parents, Patient Admission, Personal Autonomy, Third-Party Consent, Treatment Refusal, Adolescent, Informed Consent, Jurisprudence, Minors, Patient Participation, Psychology, Psychotherapy
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- 1993
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18. Altruistic surrogacy and informed consent.
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Oakley J
- Subjects
- Altruism, Cognition, Comprehension, Decision Making, Disclosure, Female, Humans, Mental Competency, Risk, Risk Assessment, Stress, Psychological, Women, Ethics, Freedom, Informed Consent, Maternal-Fetal Relations, Personal Autonomy, Psychology, Surrogate Mothers
- Abstract
A crucial premise in many recent arguments against the moral permissibility of surrogate motherhood arrangements is the claim that a woman cannot autonomously consent to gestating and relinquishing a child to another couple, because she cannot be fully informed about what her future emotional responses will be to the foetus developing within her, and to the giving up of the newborn infant to its social parents. When conjoined with some moral principle about the justifiable limits on the ways others can be expected to exercise their autonomy on our behalf, this claim is often taken to establish that various forms of surrogate motherhood arrangements are morally wrong. In this paper I want to show that there is a serious non sequitur in this kind of argument. That is, I want to show that even if women cannot in fact have this kind of information about what their future emotional responses to pregnancy and relinquishment will be, nothing follows about the wrongness or otherwise of surrogacy. For, when we consider what counts as informed consent in the context of other important ventures with uncertain consequences, it becomes clear that informed consent does not require having this kind of information about one's future emotional states. In putting these arguments, I also hope to clarify some of the connections which might be thought to hold between informed consent and autonomous decision-making generally.
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- 1992
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19. YouTube in the Classroom: Helpful Tips and Student Perceptions
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Fleck, Bethany K. B., Beckman, Lisa M., and Sterns, Jillian L.
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The rise in popularity of YouTube has made the use of short video clips during college classroom instruction a common learning tool. However, questions still remain on how to best implement this learning tool as well as students' perceptions of its use. Blended Learning Theory and Information Processing Theory provide insights into successful integration of technology into the classroom. Literature on multimedia and discussions is also reviewed to shed light on their potential value as teaching techniques. As an example of successful integration, a method of presenting YouTube clips is described in a psychology course. Immediately after the videos, the class participated in structured discussions. Students' perceptions of the YouTube videos were positive; however, students perceived certain videos as more helpful than others. In addition, class quiz scores are reflected on as indices of learning.
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- 2014
20. To What Extent Is Mathematical Ability Predictive of Performance in a Methodology and Statistics Course? Can an Action Research Approach Be Used to Understand the Relevance of Mathematical Ability in Psychology Undergraduates?
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Bourne, Victoria J.
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Research methods and statistical analysis is typically the least liked and most anxiety provoking aspect of a psychology undergraduate degree, in large part due to the mathematical component of the content. In this first cycle of a piece of action research, students' mathematical ability is examined in relation to their performance across different assessments. A maths test, including only components relevant to psychological research and analysis, was designed and subsequently completed by 427 students. Factor analysis revealed three distinct facets: understanding of mathematical procedures; interpretation of findings; and understanding the semantics of mathematics. Only the procedural and interpretative factors were predictive of overall course performance. Higher scores on both factors predicted better performance on multiple choice questions assessment and an unseen exam, whereas only the interpretation factor predicted performance on a critical thinking assignment and a lab report. The findings are considered with a view to developing another cycle of action research that more actively involves students.
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- 2014
21. Elaborations in Expository Text Impose a Substantial Time Cost but Do Not Enhance Learning
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Daley, Nola and Rawson, Katherine A.
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Textbook passages commonly include elaborations (details supporting main ideas) with the assumption that elaborations will improve learning of the main ideas. However, elaborations increase text length, which subsequently increases the reading time of that text. These observations lead to the two focal questions of interest in the current study: What is the time cost imposed by including elaborations within textbooks? Does the benefit of elaborations for enhancing memory for main ideas outweigh this time cost? In three experiments, students studied elaborated versus unelaborated versions of psychology textbook passages. Two days later, students completed final tests, including cued recall for main ideas and comprehension tests. In all experiments, we found a substantial cost in terms of increased reading time for the elaborated text but no evidence of increased memory for main ideas to offset this cost. To facilitate further interpretation of the similar test performance observed for elaborated versus unelaborated texts, experiment 2 ruled out functional floor or ceiling effects and established that both text versions enhanced learning (but did so to a similar extent). These results indicate that elaborations embedded within textbook passages may not facilitate learning and that unelaborated texts may be more efficient than elaborated texts.
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- 2019
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22. The Paradox of the Missing Biological Function in Understanding: Implications for Moral and General Education
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Iran-Nejad, Asghar
- Abstract
This essay argues that the endemic moral crisis and the crisis of confidence in education are related; and both are a function, in part, of a paradoxical divide between two types of human understanding: psychological and biofunctional. In the psychological realm, people cause understanding using the psychological theories they know. Biofunctionally, understanding is "caught" by the understander, by analogy to catching a cold, caused by an unknown biological function, without the understander (a) having direct access to the cause, (b) knowing what the cause is, and (c) realizing how the cause works. This paradox introduces a divide between people's psychological and biofunctional types of understanding. Unwarily, people tend to overlook this divide thereby compromising their full understanding potential. In this essay, I elaborate on the nature of this paradox, the awesome divide that it causes, and its implications for moral and general education.
- Published
- 2013
23. Personalizing the Material Leads to College Students' Better Understanding of Concepts
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Huffman, Charles J.
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In this study, students completed two different projects about personality. The results showed that while the students learned more about themselves, personalizing the material also increased their ability to understand core concepts.
- Published
- 2013
24. Applied and Transformed Understanding in Introductory Psychology: Analysis of a Final Essay Assignment
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Clark, Kevin M.
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This paper describes a case study of the impact of the introductory psychology course on students' understanding of their life experiences and course-related ideas. Student responses to a final essay assignment were analyzed to construct composites for areas of applied and transformed understanding. Results are important for psychology teachers and general educators seeking to better understand the potential applicability of course concepts to students' lives. The study also has broader cross-disciplinary relevance in demonstrating the use of the final essay assignment for promoting concept application and reflection and for assessing the impact of our courses on student understanding. (Contains 1 table.)
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- 2010
25. Student Understanding of Graph Slope and Area under a Graph: A Comparison of Physics and Nonphysics Students
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Susac, Ana, Bubic, Andreja, Kazotti, Elizabeta, Planinic, Maja, and Palmovic, Marijan
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Previous studies have identified physics students' difficulties with graph slope and area under a graph in different contexts. In this study we compared physics and nonphysics (psychology) students' understanding of graphs; i.e., we evaluated the effects of concept (graph slope vs area under graph), type of question (qualitative vs quantitative), and context (physics vs finance) on their scores, strategies, and eye-tracking data. All students solved questions about graph slope better than the questions about area under a graph. Psychology students scored rather low on the questions about area under a graph, and physics students spent more time on questions about area under a graph than on slope questions, indicating that understanding of area under a graph is quite a difficult concept that seems unlikely to develop spontaneously. Generally, physics students had comparable scores on the qualitative and quantitative questions, whereas psychology students solved qualitative questions much better. As expected, students' scores and eye-tracking measures indicated that problems involving physics context were easier for physics students since they typically had higher scores and shorter total and axes viewing times for physics than finance questions. Some physics students may have transferred the concepts and techniques from physics to finance because they typically scored better than psychology students on the finance questions that were novel for both groups. Analysis of student strategies showed that physics students mostly relied on strategies learned in physics courses, with strong emphasis on the use of formulas, whereas psychology students mostly used common-sense strategies, as they did not know the physics formulas. The implications of the results for teaching and learning about graphs in physics courses are also discussed.
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- 2018
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26. Proceedings of the Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (30th, Prague, Czech Republic, July 16-21, 2006). Volume 4
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International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education., Novotna, Jarmila, Moraova, Hana, Kratka, Magdalena, and Stehlikova, Nad'a
- Abstract
This document contains the fourth volume of the proceedings of the 30th Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education. Conference presentations are centered around the theme "Mathematics at the Centre." This volume features 59 research reports by presenters with last names beginning between Kun and Ros: (1) Evaluational Research on a Video-Based In-Service Mathematics Teacher Training Project--Reported Instructional Practice and Judgements on Instructional Quality (Sebastian Kuntze and Kristina Reiss); (2) Constructing a Sinusoidal Periodic Covariation (Chronis Kynigos and Kostas Gavrilis; (3) Modelling Fractions with Area: The Salience of Vertical Partitioning (Andreas O. Kyriakides); (4) Dynamic Visualization and the Case of "Stars in Cage" (Ilana Lavy); (5) Mathematics, Gender, and Large Scale Data: New Directions or More of the Same? (Gilah C. Leder, Helen J. Forgasz, and Peter J. Taylor); (6) Evaluation and Reconstruction of Mathematics Textbooks by Prospective Teachers (Kyung Hwa Lee); (7) Maths, ICT and Pedagogy: An Examination of Equitable Practice in Diverse Contexts (Stephen Lerman and Robyn Zevenbergen); (8) Solving Problems in Different Ways: Teachers' Knowledge Situated in Practice (Anat Levav-Waynberg and Roza Leikin); (9) Persona-Based Journaling: Aligning the Product with the Process (Peter Liljedahl); (10) The Power of Goal Orientation in Predicting Student Mathematics Achievement (Chuan-Ju Lin, Pi-Hsia Hung, and Suwei Lin); (11) Why Do Student Teachers Teach or Not Teach the Professed Values? (Fang-Chi Lin, Chih-Yeuan Wang, Chien Chin, and Gi-Yuan Chang); (12) Investigating Mathematics Learning with the Use of Computer Programmes in Primary Schools (Maria Dolores Lozano, Ivonne Twiggy Sandoval, and Maria Trigueros); (13) Is Subject Matter Knowledge Affected by Experience? The Case of Composition of Functions (Calin A. Lucus); (14) Classroom Factors Supporting Progress in Mathematics (Irene F. Mackay); (15) A Remedial Intervention in Algebra (Laura Maffei and Maria Alessandra Mariotti); (16) The Problem-Solving Element in Young Students' Work Related to the Concept of Area (Joanna Mamona-Downs and Ioannis Papadopoulos); (17) On Students' Conceptions in Vector Space Theory (Mirko Maracci); (18) Towards the Development of a Self-Regulated Mathematical Problem Solving Model (Andri Marcou and Stephen Lerman); (19) Visual Cognition: Content Knowledge and Beliefs of Preschool Teachers (Zvia Markovits, Sherman Rosenfeld, and Bat-Sheva Eylon); (20) An Unexpected Way of Thinking about Linear Function Tables (Mara Martinez and Barbara Brizuela); (21) Levels of Understanding of Patterns in Multiple Representations (Stalo Michael, Iliada Elia, Athanasios Gagatsis, Athina Theoklitou, and Andreas Savva); (22) Can the Spontaneous and Uncritical Application of the Linear Model be Questioned? (Modestina Modestou and Athanasios Gagatsis); (23) Primary Students' Reasoning in Problem Solving and Teachers' Evaluation of Their Arguments (Annita Monoyiou, Xenia Xistouri, and George Philippou); (24) Use of Examples in Conjecturing and Proving: An Exploratory Study (Francesca Morselli); (25) Knowledge Building and Knowledge Forum: Grade 4 Students Collaborate to Solve Linear Generalizing Problems (Joan Moss and Ruth Beatty); (26) Improving Mathematical Knowledge through Modeling in Elementary Schools (Nicholas Mousoulides, Marios Pittalis, and Constantinos Christou); (27) Integrating Concepts and Processes in Early Mathematics: The Australian Pattern and Structure Mathematics Awareness Project (PASMAP) (Joanne Mulligan, Michael Mitchelmore, and Anne Prescott); (28) Embodiment and Reasoning in Children's Invented Calculation Strategies (Carol Murphy); (29) When the Wrong Answer is the "Good" Answer: Problem-Solving as a Means for Identifying Mathematical Promise (Dorit Neria and Miriam Amit); (30) The Concept of Equations: What Have Students Met Before? (Rosana Nogueira de Lima and David Tall); (31)Teaching Becomes You: The Challenges of Placing Identity Formation at the Centre of Mathematics Pre-Service Teacher Education (Kathleen T. Nolan); (32) Structure Sense for University Algebra (Jarmila Novotna, Nad'a Stehlikova and Maureen Hoch); (33) Semiotic Chaining in an Expression Constructing Activity Aimed at the Transition from Arithmetic to Algebra (Masakazu Okazaki); (34) Kikan-Shido: Through the Lens of Guiding Student Activity (Catherine A. O'Keefe, Xu Li Hua, and David J. Clarke); (35) Hiding and Showing Construction Elements in a Dynamic Geometry Software: A Focusing Process (Federica Olivero); (36) Prompting Growth for Prospective Teachers Using Cognitive Dissonance (Jo Clay Olson, Meghan Colasanti, and Karmin Trujillo); (37) Metacognition and Reading--Criteria for Comprehension of Mathematics Texts (Magnus Osterholm); (38) Classification Activities and Definition Construction at the Elementary Level (Cecile Ouvrier-Buffet); (39) Abstraction, Scaffolding and Emergent Goals (Mehmet Fatih Ozmantar and John Monaghan); (40) Cognitive and Metacognitive Performance on Mathematics (Areti Panaoura and Georgia Panaoura); (41) Measuring and Relating Primary Students' Motives, Goals and Performance in Mathematics (Marilena Pantziara and George Philippou); (42) The Intuitive Rule More A-More B: The Impact of a Dynamic Geometry Software (Pandelitsa Papageorgiou, Annita Monoyiou, and Demetra Pitta-Pantazi); (43) The Reflective Abstraction in the Construction of the Concept of the Definite Integral: A Case Study (Theodorus Paschos and Vassiliki Farmaki); (44) Infinity of Numbers: How Students Understand It (Erkki Pehkonen, Markku S. Hannula, Hanna Maijala, and Riitta Soro); (45) The Assessment of Undergraduate Mathematicians: Recrafting Assessment of Learning to Provide Opportunities for Assessment as Learning (Hillary Povey and Corinne Angier); (46) Social Cognition Emerging from Student-to-Student Discursive Interactions during Mathematical Problem Solving (Arthur B. Powell); (47) Understanding Teachers' Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching: A Theoretical and Methodological Approach (Arthur B. Powell and Evelyn Hanna); (48) Continuities and Discontinuities for Fractions: A Proposal for Analysing in Different Levels (Susanne Prediger); (49) Dynamic Manipulation Schemes of Geometrical Constructions: Instrumental Genesis as an Abstraction Process (Giorgos Psycharis); (50) Rhythm and the Grasping of the General (Luis Radford, Caroline Bardini, and Cristina Sabena); (51) Developing Mathematical Initiative in Minority Students (Iuliana Radu, Barbara Tozzi, and Keith Weber); (52) A Model of Textbook Use (Sebastian Rezat); (53) Identical Twins' Perceptions of Two Different Instructional Approaches to Learning Mathematics (Candice L. Ridlon); (54) When Successful Comparison of Decimals Doesn't Tell the Full Story (Anne Roche and Doug M. Clarke); (55) Analysis of Proofs Produced by University Mathematics Students, and the Influence of Using Cabri Software (Felix Rodriguez and Angel Gutierrez); (56) Challenging the Mathematical Beliefs of Preservice Elementary School Teachers (Katrin Rolka, Bettina Rosken, and Peter Liljedahl); (57) Partial Knowledge Constructs for the Probability Area Model (Gila Ron, Tommy Dreyfus, and Rina Hershkowitz); (58) A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words--The Role of Visualization in Mathematics Learning (Bettina Rosken and Katrin Rolka); and (59) Establishing and Justifying Algebraic Generalization at the Sixth Grade Level (Joanne Rossi Becker and Ferdinand Rivera). (Individual papers contain references.)
- Published
- 2006
27. Proceedings of the Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education (30th, Prague, Czech Republic, July 16-21, 2006). Volume 5
- Author
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International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education., Novotna, Jarmila, Moraova, Hana, Kratka, Magdalena, and Stehlikova, Nad'a
- Abstract
This document contains the fifth volume of the proceedings of the 30th Conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education. Conference presentations are centered around the theme "Mathematics at the Centre." This volume features 59 research reports by presenters with last names beginning between Sac and Zaz: (1) Bryan's Story: Classroom Miscommunication about General Symbolic Notation and the Emergence of a Conjecture during a CAS-Based Algebra Activity (Ana Isabel Sacristan and Carolyn Kieran); (2) A Teacher's Method to Introduce Story-Problems: Student-Generated Problems (Adalira Saenz-Ludlow); (3) "There's More than Meets the Eye": Analysing Verbal Protocols, Gazes and Sketches on External Mathematical Representations (Jonathan P. San Diego, James Aczel, Barbara Hodgson, and Eileen Scanlon); (4) Notions of Variability in Chance Settings (Ernesto Sanchez and Miguel Mercado Martinez); (5) Elementary Preservice Teacher Learning Levels (Victoria Sanchez and Miguel Mercado Martinez); (6) Mathematics Achievement: Sex Differences vs. Gender Differences (Dora Santos, Sonia Ursini, Martha Patricia Ramirez, and Gabriel Sanchez); (7) Self Assessment and Appropriation of Assessment Criteria (Leonor Santos and Anabela Gomes); (8) Drawing as Problem-Solving: Young Children's Mathematical Reasoning through Pictures (Carole Saundry and Cynthia Nicol); (9) The Role of the Teacher in Turning Claims to Arguments (Baruch Schwarz, Rina Hershkowitz, and Shirly Azmon); (10) Learning Mathematics for Teaching (Nanette Seago and Lynn Goldsmith); (11) Coherence of Mathematics Lessons in Japanese Eighth-Grade Classrooms (Yasuhiro Sekiguchi); (12) Triangle Property Relationships: Making the Connections (Penelope Serow); (13) Access to Mathematics versus Access to the Language of Power (Mamokgethi Setati); (14) Compartmentalization of Representation in Tasks Related to Addition and Subtraction Using the Number Line (Myria Shiakalli and Athanasios Gagatsis); (15)The Derivation of a Learning Assessment Framework for Multiplicative Thinking (Dianne Siemon, John Izard, Margarita Breed, and Jo Virgona); (16) Sources of Students' Frustration in Bridging Mathematics Courses (Anna Sierpinska); (17) What Makes a Good Problem? An Aesthetic Lens (Nathalie Sinclair and Sandra Crespo); (18) Discovering a Rule and Its Mathematical Justification in Modeling Activities Using Spreadsheet (Hong-chan Son and Hee-chan Lew); (19) Investigating Preservice Teachers' Understanding and Strategies on a Student's Errors of Reflective Symmetry (Ji-Won Son); (20) Exploring the Role Played by the Remainder in the Solution of Division Problems (Alina Galvao Spinillo and Sintria Labres Lautert); (21) Incomplete or Incorrect Understanding of Decimals: An Important Deficit for Student Nurses (Vicki Steinle and Robyn Pierce); (22) Proportional Reasoning: Variable Influencing the Problems Difficulty Level and One's Use of Problem Solving Strategies (Olof Bjorg Steinthorsdottir); (23) The Impact of the Intuitive Rule "If A Then B, If Not A Then Not B" in Perimeter and Area Tasks (Lambros Stephanou and Demetra Pitta-Pantazi); (24) Process-Object Difficulties in Linear Algebra: Eigenvalues and Eigenvectors (Sepideh Stewart and Michael O. J. Thomas); (25) Conceptual Changes as Dialectical Transformation (Nadia Stoyanova Kennedy); (26) Content Knowledge for Mathematics Teaching: The Case of Reasoning and Proving (Andreas J. Stylianides and Gabriel J. Stylianides); (27) "Making Proof Central to Pre-High School Mathematics Is an Appropriate Instructional Goal": Provable, Refutable, or Undecidable Proposition? (Gabriel J. Stylianides and Andreas J. Stylianides); (28) Power and Poverty--Whose, Where, and Why?: School Mathematics, Context and the Social Construction of "Disadvantage" (Dalene M. Swanson); (29) Documenting Learning in School-Based Mathematics Communities of Teachers (Paola Sztajn); (30) Research and Teaching--Can One Person Do Both? A Case Study (MichalTabach); (31) Computer "Knowledge" and Student's Images of Figures: The Case of Dragging (Varda Talmon and Michal Yerushalmy); (32) Graphics Calculators for Mathematics Learning in Singapore and Victoria (Australia): Teachers' Views (Hazel Tan and Helen J. Forgasz); (33) Vague Language in Greek and English Mathematical Talk: A Variation Study in Face-Work (Konstantinos Tatsis and Tim Rowland); (34) Teachers Using Computers in Mathematics: A Longitudinal Study (Michael O. J. Thomas); (35) Analysing Classroom Interactions Using Critical Discourse Analysis (Steve Thornton and Noemi Reynolds); (36) Pre-Service and In-Service Mathematics Teachers' Concept Images of Radian (Tahsin Topcu, Mahmut Kertil, Hatice Akkoc, Kamil Yilmaz, and Osman Onder); (37) Adaptive Expertise in the Number Domain 20-100 (Joke Torbeyns, Lien Vanderveken, Lieven Verschaffel, and Pol Ghesquiere); (38) Mathematical Activity in a Technological Workplace: Results from an Ethnographic Study (Chrissavgi Triantafillou and Despina Potari); (39) Pupils' Over-Use of Proportionality on Missing-Value Problems: How Numbers May Change Solutions (Wim Van Dooren, Dirk De Bock, Marleen Evers, and Lieven Verschaffel); (40) Arithmetical Procedures in the Solution of a Problem Involving Velocity (Veronica Vargas and Jose Guzman); (41) Introducing Algebraic Thinking to 13 Year-Old Students: The Case of the Inequality (Petros Verikios and Vassiliki Farmaki); (42) Why Is a Discontinuous Function Differentiable? (Antti Viholainen); (43) Overgeneralization of Linear Models: Presence and Characteristics among University Students (Monica Villareal, Cristina Esteley, and Humberto Alagia); (44) Educational Design Research in Mozambique: Starting Mathematics from Authentic Resources (Pauline Vos, Tiago G. Devesse, and Assane Rassul); (45) "The Big Test": A School Community Experiences Standardized Mathematics Assessment (Fiona Walls); (46) Numeracy Reform in New Zealand: Factors that Influence Classroom Enactment (Margaret Walshaw and Glenda Anthony); (47) An Investigation of Factors Influencing Teachers' Scoring Student Responses to Mathematics Constructed-Response Assessment Tasks (Ning Wang and Jinfa Cai); (48) Teacher Actions that Assist Young Students to Write Generalizations in Words and in Symbols (Elizabeth Warren); (49) Promoting Pre-Service Teachers' Understanding of Decimal Notation and Its Teaching (Wanty Widjaja and Kaye Stacey); (50) Impetus to Explore: Approaching Operational Deficiency Optimistically (Gaye Williams); (51) Generating and Evaluating Geometry Conjectures with Self-Directed Experiments (Chao-Jung Wu, Wing-Kwong Wong, Ying-Hao Cheng, and Yunn-Wen Lien); (52) The Distributions of van Hiele Levels of Geometric Thinking among 1st and 6th Graders (Der-bang Wu and Hsiu-Ian Ma); (53) Elementary Teacher Education and Teacher Efficacy toward Mathematics and Science (Su-Chiao Wu and Yu Liang Chang); (54) Spatial Rotation and Perspective Taking Abilities in Relation to Performance in Reflective Symmetry Tasks (Xenia Xistouri and Demetra Pitta-Pantazi); (55) Elementary Teachers' Mathematics Beliefs and Teaching Practices after a Curriculum Reform (Shirley M. Yates); (56) Inquiry Activities in a Classroom: Extra-Logical Processes of Illumination vs. Logical Process of Deductive and Inductive Reasoning. A Case Study (Oleksiy Yevdokimov); (57) Developments of a Child's Fraction Concepts with the Help of Psychological Tools: A Vygotsky's Cultural-Historical Perspective (Kaori Yoshida); (58) A Teacher's Treatment of Examples as Reflection of Her Knowledge-Base (Orit Zaslavsky, Guershon Harel, and Alfred Manaster); and (59) Cognitive Conflict and its Resolution via Pivotal/Bridging Example (Rina Zazkis and Egan Chernoff). (Individual papers contain references.)
- Published
- 2006
28. Proceedings of the 27th International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education Conference Held Jointly with the 25th PME-NA Conference (Honolulu, Hawaii, July 13-18, 2003). Volume 1
- Author
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International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education., Pateman, Neil A.,, Dougherty, Barbara J., and Zilliox, Joseph T.
- Abstract
This volume of the 27th International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education Conference presents papers from: plenary panels; research forums; working sessions; discussion groups; short oral communications; and poster sessions from the meeting. Plenary lectures included: (1) Studying and Capturing the Complexity of Practice: The Case of the Dance of Agency (Jo Boaler); (2) Voyaging from Theory to Practice in Teaching and Learning: A View from Hawaii (Barbara Dougherty and Joseph Zilliox); (3) The Dialectics between Theory and Practice: Theoretical Issues and Practice Aspects from an Early Algebra Project (Nicolina Malara); and (4) Probing Students' Understanding of Variables through Cognitive Conflict: Is the Concept of a Variable So Difficult for Students to Understand (Toshiakaira Fujii). Plenary Panel, Teachers Who Navigate between Their Research and Their Practice, included: (1) The Teacher/Researcher Roles (Jarmila Novotna); (2) A Moment in Time, Twisted between History and Practice (Agatha Lebethe); (3) Navigating between Research and Practice: Finding My Own Way (Vicki Zack); and (4) With Less Do More (Gershon Rosen). The first research forum, "Perceptuo-Motor Activity and Imagination in Mathematics Learning," included: (1) Three Conjectures Concerning the Relationship between Body Activity and Understanding Mathematics (Ricardo Nemiroskvy); (2) Approaching Algebra through a Motion Experiences (Ornella Robutti and Fernando Arzarello); (3) Incorporating Experiences of Motion into a Calculus Classroom (Marty Schnepp and Daniel Chazan); (4) Sensors, Body, Technology and Multiple Representations (Marcelo Borba and Nilce Scheffer); and (5) Becoming Friends with Acceleration: The Role of Tools and Bodily Activity in Mathematical Learning (Chris Rasmussen and Ricardo Nemiroskvy). The second research forum, "Equity, Mathematics Learning and Technology," included: (1) Equity, Mathematics Learning and Computers: Who Gets a Fair Deal in Australian SecondarySchools? (Helen J. Forgasz); (2) Mathematical Literacy in Higher Education: Attracting Women to Engineering Professions by Using ICT (Christine Keitel); (3) Availability and (Non-) Use of Technology in and for Mathematics Education in Poor Schools in South Africa (Mamokgethi Setati); (4) Equity, Mathematics Learning and Technology--Introduction (Gilah C. Leder); (5) Feminist Frameworks for Researching Mathematics (Gabriele Kaiser); (6) Windows on Practice: Investigating Equity in Technology Based Mathematics Classrooms (Colleen Vale); and (7) Some Issues Facing Work for Equity in Mathematics Education (Walter G. Secada). Research Report, Facilitating the Teaching of Space Mathematics: An Evaluation (Kay Diane Owens) concludes this volume of the 27th proceedings. Information relating to: working sessions; discussion groups; short oral communications; and poster sessions is also included. (Individual papers contain references.) [For 2002 Proceedings Volumes 1-4, see ED476065.]
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- 2003
29. Concept Mapping for Critical Thinking: Efficacy, Timing, & Type
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Harris, Charles M. and Zha, Shenghua
- Abstract
Many college students are not progressing in the development of their critical thinking skills. Concept mapping is a technique for facilitating validation of one's critical thinking by graphically depicting the structure of complex concepts. Each of our three studies of concept mapping involved approximately 240 students enrolled in four sections of an introductory psychology course. In each study, students in two sections were required to use Cacoo, a free online resource, to construct concept maps of specified complex concepts. In the initial study of the efficacy of concept mapping, students who constructed concept maps scored significantly higher on unit tests, F (3, 240) = 4.17, p = 0.007, p < 0.01, 95% CI, 0.047 ES. In the second study, students, who constructed concept maps during preparation for unit tests, performed significantly higher, F (3, 240) = 8.89, p = 0.000, 95% CI, than students who constructed concept maps after lectures that included the specified complex concepts. The third study found no significant differences between hierarchical and systems types of concept maps for facilitating critical thinking, F (3, 192) = 0.975, p = 0.406, 95% CI, ES = 0.015. Consequently, we conclude that validating one's critical thinking by the construction of concept maps, regardless of type, will tend to facilitate successful performance. Additionally, we submit that graphic depiction, regardless of type, will facilitate comprehension of complex concepts within all disciplines.
- Published
- 2017
30. Do Causal and Concessive Connectives Guide Emotional Expectancies in Comprehension? A Double-Task Paradigm Using Emotional Icons
- Author
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Morera, Yurena, León, José A., Escudero, Inmaculada, and de Vega, Manuel
- Abstract
Continuity and discontinuity are sometimes marked in discourse by means of connectives. This study tested for the first time whether causal and concessive connectives induce expectations of emotional continuity and discontinuity, respectively. Using a novel double-task paradigm, participants first listened to an antecedent clause with a causal or concessive connective ("'Because/Although' the pupil studied a lot…"), followed by an emotional icon (emoticon), which could match or mismatch the emotional valence of the antecedent. In Experiment 1 participants had to choose the best continuation for the antecedent clause ("he passed" vs. "he failed" the exam) and then identify the emoticon previously shown. In Experiment 2 they had to judge a perceptual feature of the emoticon before performing the consequent choice task. For causal connectives the congruence between the antecedent and the emoticon valence facilitates the consequent choice task (Experiment 1 and Experiment 2) and the emoticon recognition task (Experiment 1) but not the early perceptual judgment task (Experiment 2). This means that causal connectives promote emotional valence continuity at the stage of meaning integration processes. By contrast, concessive connectives do not induce emotional continuity expectancies. In addition, performance in causal positive antecedents and in concessive negative antecedents was more efficient than in the contrasting conditions, suggesting strong emotional biases for these connectives.
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- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Competence to consent to treatment as a psychological construct.
- Author
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Tepper AM and Elwork A
- Subjects
- Commitment of Mentally Ill, Communication, Disclosure, Humans, Patient Care, Treatment Refusal, Cognition, Comprehension, Decision Making, Informed Consent, Institutionalization, Jurisprudence, Mental Competency, Mentally Ill Persons, Psychology, Reference Standards
- Published
- 1984
- Full Text
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32. Empirical studies of ethical issues in research. A research agenda.
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Stanley B, Sieber JE, and Melton GB
- Subjects
- Comprehension, Disclosure, Empirical Research, Ethics Committees, Research, Humans, Mentally Ill Persons, Minors, Research, Research Subjects, Researcher-Subject Relations, Risk Assessment, Social Control, Formal, Behavioral Research, Ethics, Professional, Informed Consent, Psychology
- Published
- 1987
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33. Use, content, and readability of written informed consent forms for treatment.
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Handelsman MM, Kemper MB, Kesson-Craig P, McLain J, and Johnsrud C
- Subjects
- Cognition, Comprehension, Confidentiality, Data Collection, Disclosure, Fees, Medical, Humans, Mentally Ill Persons, Prevalence, Statistics as Topic, Consent Forms, Informed Consent, Psychology, Psychotherapy
- Published
- 1986
34. Coparticipant effects on subjects' decisions to consent for risk-involving research.
- Author
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Finney PD
- Subjects
- Cognition, Comprehension, Data Collection, Deception, Female, Human Experimentation, Humans, Men, Pain, Research Subjects, Risk, Risk Assessment, Stress, Psychological, Students, Women, Behavioral Research, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Informed Consent, Motivation, Psychology, Research
- Published
- 1984
35. Informed consent for psychotherapy: content analysis of selected forms.
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Talbert FS and Pipes RP
- Subjects
- Confidentiality, Data Collection, Disclosure, Evaluation Studies as Topic, Humans, Mentally Ill Persons, Patient Advocacy, Patient Rights, Risk, Risk Assessment, Students, Universities, Cognition, Comprehension, Consent Forms, Counseling, Informed Consent, Psychology, Psychotherapy
- Published
- 1988
- Full Text
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36. The readability of psychological reports.
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JONES RL and GROSS FP
- Subjects
- Humans, Comprehension, Medical Records, Psychology
- Published
- 1959
37. The value of non-verbal communication in personality understanding.
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BARBARA DA
- Subjects
- Humans, Comprehension, Language, Nonverbal Communication, Personality, Personality Disorders, Psychology
- Published
- 1956
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38. [The comprehension of psychology understanding].
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AUSTREGESILO A
- Subjects
- Humans, Comprehension, Psychiatry, Psychology
- Published
- 1951
39. Advancement of understanding and advancement of professional service.
- Author
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BENTLEY M
- Subjects
- Humans, Comprehension, Psychology
- Published
- 1948
40. Readability of typography in psychological journals.
- Author
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SOAR RS
- Subjects
- Humans, Comprehension, Mental Disorders, Printing, Psychology
- Published
- 1951
- Full Text
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41. Teaching Games for Understanding Conference Supplement from the German Sport University
- Abstract
By bringing together the national German sports game community and an international scientific community in a joint conference, the 6th International Teaching Games for Understanding Conference (TGfU) Meets the 10th German Sports Games Symposium of the German Association of Sport Science (DVS), held July 25-27, 2016, at the German Sport University in Cologne, fostered the interdisciplinary discussion of team and racket sports in the fields of sport pedagogy, sport didactics, sport psychology, computer science, human movement science, and training science. The conference, chaired by Daniel Memmert and Philip Furley, and organized by the Institute of Cognitive and Team/Racket Sport Research, aimed to cover the entire spectrum of sports sciences through the Plenary Opening Lecture, three keynote speakers, nine invited talks, invited papers, practical workshops, coaching clinics, oral presentations, and poster presentations. This issue begins with the following: Preface (Daniel Memmert); and Opening Plenary Lecture--We Are What We Teach: TGfU as a Complex Ecological Situation (J. Butler). Keynotes include: (1) "Is TGfU a Model Only Test Pilots Can Fly?": Teacher-Coach Development in Game-Centered Approaches (D. Kirk); (2) Using Technology to Evaluate Game Play for Beginners and Proficient Players That Encompasses Game-Play Evaluation (P. G. O'Donoghue); and (3) Teaching Games for Understanding and the Psychology of Intuition (H. Plessner). Invited Talks include: (1) Capturing the Complexity of Team Synergies to Provide a Better Practice (D. Araújo); (2) Student Learning Outcome and Teachers' Autonomy Support toward Teaching Games for Understanding through Adopting Accessible Technology and Alternative Sport Equipment: An Asian Experience (A. S. Ha); (3) Understanding Games for Teaching--Reflections on Empirical Approaches toward Game Instruction (S. König); (4) Building an Increased Evidence Base for Game-Centered Approaches in Professional Practice Settings (S. Harvey); (5) Instructions in Sports from a Cognitive Information-Processing Perspective: Implications for Theory and Practice within Teaching and Learning in Sport Games (P. A. Furley); (6) Analyzing Complex Dynamical Systems: Artificial Neural Networks Contribute New Insight Concerning Optimal Athletic Techniques and Tactics (A. Schmidt); (7) Using Modification to Generate Emergent Performance (and Learning?) in Sports (D. Farrow, T. Buszard, M. Reid, and R. Masters); (8) Game-Centered Approaches: Different Perspectives, Same Goals--Working Together for Learning (D. Gutierrez); and (9) "Leveling the Playing Field" in Physical Education with Adaptation Games (K. Pagnano Richardson, D. Sheehy, and T. Hopper). The section, Thematic Symposia, includes the following symposia descriptions and presentations: (1) Developing a Conceptual Framework to Underpin the Practical Art of Making Games Accessible to Players (L. Almond): (a) Conceptual Framework for Understanding Digital Video Game Design and Its Relationship to Teaching Games for Understanding (A. Price); (b) Translating Formal Game Into Manageable Game Forms: The Case of Volleyball (J. Afonso C. Bessa, R. Aroújo, P. Coutinho, and I. Mesquita); (c) Making Sense of Handball (L. McCarthy); (d) The Thinking behind a Conceptual Framework for Teaching/Coaching Games (L. Almond); and (e) Perspectives of Rugby Coaches in Understanding Teaching Games for Understanding (J. Lambden); (2) The Ecological Dynamics Approach to Sport Pedagogics and Tactical Analysis (D. Araujo, K. Davids, and I. Renshaw): (a) Implementing a Nonlinear Physical Education Pedagogy in an Australian Secondary School (B. Moy); (b) Reflecting on Practice: An Exploration of NLP in Games Teaching (I. Renshaw and J. Clancy); (c) Evaluating a 12-Week Games-Based Training Program to Improve Cricket Batting Skill (J. D. Connor, I. Renshaw, D. Farrow, and B. Abernethy); (d) Manipulating Goal Posts Significantly Impacts Tactical Behaviors in Small-Sided Football Games (B. Travassos, P. Silva, R. Duarte, L. Vilar, and P. T. Esteves); and (e) Players' Relative Position to Characterize the Affordances Landscape in Football (P. Passos and R. Silva); (3) Personality in Team Sport: A Coach and Athlete Perspective (J. Kleinert): (a) Personality Development in Team Sport Players (J. Ohlert and J. Kleinert); (b) Burnout, Stress, and Recovery in German Coaches (P. Schaffran, S. Altfeld, C. Zepp, J. Kleinert, and M. Kellmann); (c) The Relationship between Coaches' Emotional Intelligence and Their Perception of Player Need Satisfaction (M. Watson and J. Kleinert); and (d) The Link between Emotional Intelligence and Leadership in Soccer Coaches (B. Lobinger and S. Heisler); (4) Translating TGfU Theory into Practice: How Can We Support Teachers' and Coaches' Learning When Implementing TGfU? (K. A. Parry): (a) Supporting Teachers to Implement Game-Centered Approaches: Toward an Effective Model of Professional Development (K. A. Parry); (b) Utilizing Real-Time GPS (Adidas MiCoach System V2.0) to Enhance Soccer Coaches' Ability to Reflect in Action When Engaging in a GCA (M. Ayres and T. Howard); (c) Using a Heutagogical Approach to Develop an Undergraduate GCA Module: Developing GCA V2 (M. Ayres, A. Proce, A. Monk, and L. McCarthy); (d) Implementing Game-Centered Approaches: An Alternative Vision for Coach Education (C. Cushion and S. Harvey); and (e) Moving forward in a Game-Centered Context: A New Stage in Games and Sports Education (G. Forrest); (5) Session of the German Handball Association (S. König and S. Greve): (a) Teaching Games in Secondary Schools--TGfU or Something Else? (S. König); and (b) "Freiwurf Hamburg": Qualitative Evaluation of an Inclusive Sports Project (S. Greve); (6) Democracy in Action through Inventing Games (J. Butler): (a) Introduction to the Symposium Democracy in Action through Inventing Games (J. Butler); (b) Democracy in Action through Inventing Games: Teachers' Views about Teaching and Learning (S. McGinley); (c) Democracy in Action through Inventing Games: Exploring Moments of Aporia (or Communications Difficulties) as Opportunities for Learning (E. McGinley); (d) Democracy in Action through Inventing Games: Student Responses (A. Berning); and (e) Democracy in Action through Inventing Games: Setting the Environment (J. Sheppard); (7) The Game Performance Assessment Instrument: Twenty Years and Counting! (S. Mitchel): (a) Introduction to the GPAI (S. Mitchell); (b) Enhancing Performance Using the GPAI as a Coaching Language in Practice and Matches Administration (A. De Souza); (c) Reflecting on Student Learning: Using the iPad to Collect GPAI Data (K. Pagnano Richardson); (d) Development of GPAI Components through GPET Game Context Adaptation (D. Gutierrez and L. M. Garcia-Lopez); (e) Formally and Formatively Assessing Students Using Game Performance Rubrics (S. Harvey); and (f) GPAI Applications: Critical Responses and Possibilities (T. Hopper); (8) Complexity and the Design of Learning Systems in TGfU (A. Ovens): (a) Tactical Disturbances: Exploring the Complexity of Tactical Learning in Basketball (V. Minjares); (b) Making Sense of Complexity and Its Implications for Teaching and Coaching (R. Pucheggar); (c) Embodied Learning: A Simplified Pedagogical Complexity (S. Visawanath); and (d) The Complexity Turn in Sport and Physical Education: Reflecting on an Emerging Field (A. Ovens); (9) Learners as Complex Systems: Basic Moves, Modification-by-Adaptation, and Social Coordinated Mimicry (T. Hopper): (a) Application of Social Coordinated Mimicry: Net/Wall Example (T. Hopper and J. Rhoades); (b) Social Coordinated Mimicry: Theoretical Applications of Current Research (J. Rhoades and T. Hopper); and (c) Complexity Thinking and Early Childhood Physical Education (M. Jess and N. Carse); (10) A Critical Evaluation of Limits and Prospects of the Simple Heuristic Approach, Ball-School Approach, Ecological Dynamics Approach, and TGfU Explaining Decision Making in Sports (M. Raab and L. Musculus): (a) The Effect of Top-Down and Bottom-Up Processes in the Development of Game Performance in Basketball (M. C. Lopes, K. Roth, and P. J. Greco); (b) Training of Team Decisional Behavior in Football from an Ecological Dynamics Approach (D. Araújo and P. Silva); (c) A Holistic Approach to Decision Making in Games and Sport (S. Harvey, A. Mouchet, and R. Light); and (d) Monitoring the Development of Elite Youth Soccer Players' Decision Making: Implications for Age-Related Decision-Making Training from a Simple Heuristic Approach (L. Musculus, B. Lobinger, and M. Raab); (11) Dynamic Match Analysis (H. Folgado): (a) Small-Sided Games: An Optimal Training Tool to Represent Tactical Match Demands in Elite-Standard Youth Soccer Players? (S. B. H. Olthof, and W. G. P. Frencken, and K. A. P. M. Lemmink); (b) Real-Time Quantification of Dangerousity in Soccer Using Spatiotemporal Tracking Data (D. Link, S. Lang, and P. Seidenschwarz); (c) Spatial-Temporal Patterns of Play Constrain the Success of Defensive Actions in Association Football (B. Travassos, R. Monteiro, P. Marques, and R. Duarte); and (d) Changes in Offensive Tactical Performance among Under-13 Basketball Players during 4 Months of Training (T. J. Leonardi, A. L. A. Soares, D. V. C. Brasil, M. C. Boscariol, C. E. Goncalves, H. M. Carvalho, and R. R. Paes); (12) Sustained Collaborative Adventures in TGfU: Communities of Practice (Chairs: H. Bohler and D. Sheehy): (a) Game Curriculum Based on Legitimate Peripheral Participation (N. Suzuki); (b) Teaching Life Skills Through TGfU Game Play: International Collaboration of CoPs (J. Sheppard); (c) Peer Mentoring: On the Move to Legitimate Peripheral Participation (D. Sheehy and H. Bohler); and (d) Reflecting Back and Looking Forward: A TGfU Graduate Cohort (K. Pagnano Richardson); (13) Implicit Motor Learning: Applying Research Evidence to Real-World Contexts (D. G. Slade): (a) Applying Implicit Teaching Methods Using a Teaching-Games-for-Understanding Model of Learning for Improving Performance in the Overarm Throw in a Physical Education Context (D. G. Slade and D. J. Cochrane); (b) Errorless Learning: An Implicit Approach Applied to Fundamental Movement Skills (C. M. Capio, J. M. Poolton, K. F. Eguia, and R. S. W. Masters); (c) Implicit Motor Skill Learning in Groups and How Teaching Games for Understanding May Contribute (J. Duivenvoorden, W. Walinga, and J. van der Kamp); and (d) The Effect of Rule Modification on Strokes in Tennis Matches: Induction of Offensive Play by Using the One-Trap Rule (H. Yamamoto and K. Kudo); (14) Developing Young Talent toward Elite Performers (Chairs: A. Güllich, K. Davids, D. Farrow, and D. Memmert): (a) The Macro-Structure of Developmental Participation Histories of World-Class Players (A. Güllich); (b) From the Micro-Structure of Practice to the Macro-Structure of Talent Development: Pedagogues as Designers (K. Davids); (c) Closing the Gap between Practice and Performance to Maximize Talent Development (D. Farrow); and (d) Fostering Young Talents: The Case of Tactical Creativity (D. Memmert); (15) An 18-Month Case Study of a Game-Centered Approach Coach Education and Development Program within a Professional Rugby Club (L. Almond): (a) Measuring the Impact of an 18-Month GCA Coach Education and Development Program within 1 Professional Rugby Club (M. Ayres, S. Page, D. Maybury, and G. Murphy); (b) An Autoethnographic Study of 1 Coach's Experience of Engaging with an 18-Month Game-Centered Approach Coach Education and Development Program (D. Maybury, G. Murphy, M. Ayres, and S. Page); (c) A Case Study Examining an 18-Month-Long Game-Centered Approach Coach Education and Development Program--The Professional Rugby Club's Perspective (D. Maybury, G. Murphy, M. Ayres, and S. Page); and (d) A Case Study Examining an 18-Month-Long Game-Centered Approach Coach Education and Development Program--The Researcher's Perspective (M. Ayres, S. Page, D. Maybury, and G. Murphy); (16) BIG Data in Sport Games (D. Link): (a) DFL Innovation Program Powering Match Analysis with Smart Data (H. Weber); (b) Defensive Compactness as a Performance Indicator for Game Annotation (N. Witt); (c) A Real-Time System for Availability Detection (O. Bartels and D. Link); (d) An Approach to Tactical Performance Optimization in a Big Data World (H. Folgado); and (e) The Use of Self-Organizing Maps to Assess Tactical Training Effectiveness in Team Handball (A. Hassan, N. Schrapf, W. Ramadan, and M. Tilp); and (17) Learning to Teach TGfU: Pedagogical Ventures with Preservice Teachers(H. Bohler and D. Sheehy): (a) Incorporating the TGfU Framework Into PETE (N. Suzuki); (b) Changing the "Course" of Games Teaching (H. Bohler); (c) Concept-Mapping the Way to TGfU Pedagogy (D. Sheehy); and (d) Suspended Disbelief and How It Works: Interacting with Avatars (M. Neutzling). Peer-Reviewed Oral Presentations include: (1) Decision Making and Task Constraints: (a) Exploring the Quiet Eye Phenomenon in Basketball Game Situations (A. Klostermann, D. Panchuk, and D. Farrow); (b) Anticipation of Beach Volleyball Attacks: A Comparison of Natural Versus Animated Virtual-Reality Scenes (C. Vater, L. Riedener, and E.-J. Hossner); (c) Development and Position Data-Related Application of a Stochastic Model for Trajectory Simulation of a Nonspinning Volleyball (B. Meyer); and (d) Fitness Level of Young Female Competitive Basketball Players (P. F. Aschendorf, C. Zinner, and J. Mester); (2) Current Trends in Performance Analysis: (a) Exploring Scientific Learning Outcomes of a 12-Session Unit of Rugby Using the Rugby Attack Assessment Instrument (RAAI): A Micro-Level Analysis (B. Llobet-Martí, V. López-Ros, and J. Barrera-Gómez); (b) Video-Based Tactics Training in Youth Tennis (A. Raschke, J. Brouwers, and M. Lames); (c) Validation and Reliability of a Game Performance Evaluation Tool for the Offensive Behavior of Players in Iranian Soccer Schools (M. Maleki and F. Allahvisi); and (d) Reliability and Validity of New Shooting Accuracy Measurement System (SAMS) Software (U. Fidan and M. Yildiz); (3) Small-Sided Team Games: (a) Comparison of Small-Sided Game Training Versus Regular Basketball Training in Physical and Technical Skills in Basketball (M. A. El-gammal); (b) Does the Use of Futsal Balls Enhance the Quality of Play in School Football? (U. Frick and C. Heim); (c) The Impact of Competition Mode and Coaching on the Amount of Actions in Youth Football (M. Akdag, D. Poimann, T. Czyz, and M. Lochmann); (d) The Impact of Competition Mode and Coaching on Physical Load in Youth Football (M. Akdag, D. Poimann, T. Czyz, and M. Lochmann); and (e) The Integrated Technique-Tactical Model (IT-TM) in a 12-Session Unit of Rugby with Novice Players: Application and Overall Outcomes (V. López-Ros and B. Llobet-Martí); (4) New Theoretical Directions for TGfU: (a) Is It Possible to Unify Teaching Games for Understanding with Nonlinearity to Improve Creativity in Team Sports? (S. Santos, J. Sampaio, and N. Leite); (b) Developing Physical Education Teachers' TGfU Content and Pedagogical Content Knowledge (B. Nkala and J. Shehu); (c) TGfU, But Not as We Know It (D. Slade and A. Martin); and (d) TGfU in Nature: The Czech Way (A. J. Martin, I. Turcová, and J. Neuman); (5) Psychophysical Factors Affect Team-Sports Performance: (a) Gibson, Yygotsky, and Bourdieu and Intentional Human Movement (W. Smith); (b) Individual Success and Personality of Professional Soccer Players: How Self-Report and Objective Performance Data Differ (J. Decius); (c) Pre-Event Competitive State Anxiety Fluctuations: Intensity, Direction, and Frequency Accounts Using the Time-to-Event Paradigm (J. E. Hagan Jnr T. Schack, and D. Pollmann); (d) The Effects of Team Constitution on Tactical Behavior of Teams During 7-a-Side Football in Small-Sided Games (J. Baptista, B. Travassos, B. Gonçalves, P. Mourão, J. L. Viana, and J. Sampaio); and (e) The Influence of Handedness on Performance on the Different Playing Positions in Female Team Handball (J. Weber, M. Wegner, and S. Fatulescu); (6) Team Tactics: (a) Key Information From Complex Interaction Processes in Football (J. Perl and D. Memmert); (b) Kinematic and Tactical Analyses in Youth Soccer (C. Augste, R. Prüßner, D. Linke, B. Grossmann, and M. Lames); (c) Impact of the "Warm-Up Game" on Tactical Awareness (N. Suzuki, S. Okuma, J. Fujisawa, and H. Anbe); (d) Emergence of Self-Organized Team Tactical Behaviors during a Preseason Football Game (A. Ric, C. Torrents, B. Goncalves, J. Sampaio, and R. Hristovsk); (e) Differences between Knockout and Group Matches: An Analysis of Tactical Behavior in Football during the FIFA World Cup 2014 (C. Winter and M. Pfeiffer); and (f) Interaction between Offensive and Defensive Behavior of Opposing Teams in Team Handball Analyzed by Artificial Neural Networks (N. Schrapf and M. Tilp); (7) TGfU in the Field: (a) About Teaching Games in Brazil: National Scientific Production and the TGfU (F. R. Costa, I. Scremin, and M. V. Euzebio); (b) Application of Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU) in Preschool Children Basketball Education (H. Zeng, A.-Q. Liu, Y. Zhang, H. Tao, and Q.-Q. Dong); (c) Combining the Tactical Games Approach, Cooperative Learning, and the Sport Education Model for Elementary School Physical Education in Japan (E. Hasegawa); (d) Effects of Teaching Games for Understanding on Quantitative and Qualitative Indexes of Grade 3 Students' Game Performance (A. Dania and K. Zounhia); and (e) A Systematic Review on Periodized Approaches to Teaching and Training: No Evidence Supporting Periodization (J. Afonso, P. T. Nikolaidis, P. Sousa, and I. Mesquita); (8) TGfU and Coaching: (a) A Soccer Content Map Designed for Novice Teachers and Coaches (A. P. Turner and P. Ward); (b) Understanding the Taiwan Judo Referee Decision Support System (T.-L. Yeh, K. Pina, and S.-Y. Wan); (c) Comparative TGfU Junior Hockey Coaching Analysis: Effect of TGfU in Game Play, Knowledge, Cardiovascular Fitness, and Coaches' Reflection in Malaysia and India (S. Nathan, G. L. Khanna, and A. Hashim); (d) TGfU Transitions: Teacher Education to Teaching Practice in 3 Countries (S. Mitchell); (e) Connecting with Diverse Communities: Athlete-Centered Coaching, TGfU, and Sport as a Vehicle for Social Communities (S. R. Walters, K. Spencer, and A. Farnham); and (f) Effects of Korfball Teaching Games for Understanding in Chinese College Students: A Randomized Study (C. Jindong, G. Hao, Y. Lei, and Y. Ming); (9) TGfU and Psychosocial Factors: (a) Psychosocial Development through a Teaching Games for Understanding Approach to Coaching (S. Graupensperger and A. Turner); (b) A Review on the Effect of Small-Sided and Modified Games in Sport Teaching and Coaching: Informing TGfU Pedagogy (S. Pill); and (c) Exploring Mixed-Reality Simulation Using TGfU (M. Neutzling, K. Pagnano-Richardson, and D. Sheehy); (10) Refereeing: (a) Decision Making in Football Officiating: An Interview Study with Top-Level Referees (U. Schnyder and E.-J. Hossner); (b) Evaluation of Innovative Technologies That Support Referees in Game Sports (O. Kolbinger, D. Link, and M. Lames); (c) The Accuracy--Adequacy Model: A Theoretical Perspective for Understanding Referees' Decisions (G. Schweizer and H. Plessner); and (d) How Effective Is a Video Review System in Soccer? (A. Pizzera, J. Marrable, and M. Raab); (11) Coaching: (a) An Investigation of Professional Top-Level Youth Football Coaches' Questionnaire Practice (E. Cope, M. Partington, C. Cushion, and S. Harvey); (b) A Conceptual Critique to Periodized Planning: Why Rigorous, Detailed Plans in Teaching Make No Sense (J. Afonso, P. T. Nikolaidis, P. Sousa, and I. Mesquita); (c) Teaching Methodologies in Football Coaching Education (J. Baptista and J. Castro); (d) A 5-Year Action Research Project Investigating Coach and Athlete Perceptions of a Game-Based Coaching Approach in High-Performance Domestic Women's Field Hockey (D. Vinson); and (e) Learning Effects of the Didactic Model of Game Action Competences on the Tactical Principles of Football (W. Valencia and E. Arias); (12) Sports Physiology and Training Science: (a) Periodization of High-Intensity Training Methods (B. Sperlich); (b) Individualized Training Prescription and Recovery Management in Game Sports (A. Ferrauti); (c) The Speedcourt: Performance Analysis and Training for Team Sport-Specific Speed and Agility (D. Born); and (d) Periodization of Strength, Speed, and Endurance Training during a Handball Season (C. Zinner); (13) Physical Education and Team Games: (a) Academics' Perceptions of Model Fidelity When Using Tactical Games Models (S. Harvey and S. Pill); (b) Physical Education Majors' Experience in a Student-Designed Games Unit (M. H. Andre and M. H. C. Tsukamoto); (c) Teaching the Pedagogy of Games Play to Future Physical Education Teachers (D. Cooper); (d) Comparison of Researchers and Physical Education Teachers' Perspectives on the Utilization of the Tactical Games Model (S. Harvey and S. Pill); (e) Talent Development in Female Soccer in Switzerland: Important Motivational Factors for Successful Transitions from an Under-16 National Team to the A-National Team (S. Horvath, G. Morgan, and D. Birrer); and (f) Specialization Regarding Constitutional Demands in Female Team Handball (J. Weber, M. Wegner, and S. Fatulescu); (14) New Developments in Team Games Pedagogy: (a) Professional Development for Game-Centered Approaches: One Size Does Not Fit All (K. A. Parry); (b) Training Teachers to Integrate Strategies to Develop Social Competencies through Playing (Modified) Games (L. Haerens, B. Mertens, V. Vonderlynck, and I. Tallir); (c) Pedagogical Innovation in Youth Sport: An Urgent and Hard Mission (C. E. Gonçalves and A. Martins); (d) Playness Pedagogy Compass (M. Hosta); and (e) Global Initiation to Team Sports (C. G. Herrero and V. E. M. Blas); (15) Psychosocial Factors Affecting Team Performance: (a) Effect of an Emotional Intelligence Learning Package on Sports Directors' Inclination toward Emotional Intelligence Acquisition and Retention (I. A. Oyewumi); (b) Synergistics Are Observable within and across Multiple Levels of Skill Analysis (W. Smith); (c) Reinventing the Game (RTG) and the Learning of Games (B. Singh); and (d) Developing Sport Team Culture and Collective Leadership (A. J. Martin and L. McCarthy); (16) Decision Making in Association Football: (a) Expert Perception and Decision Making in Assistant Referees: From Increased Understanding to Improved Performance (K. Put, J. Wagenmans, J. Spitz, and W. F. Helsen); (b) Technology and Refereeing: Video Assistance in Real Time or Slow Motion? (J. Spitz, J. Put, and W. F. Helsen); (c) The Effect of Manipulating Task Constraints and Player Numbers in Small-Sided Games in Field Hockey (E. A. Timmerman, G. J. P. Savelsbergh, and D. Farrow); and (d) The Face of Schadenfreude: Facial Reactions to Failures of a Rival Sport Team (L. Boecker and S. Topolonski); and (17) Training Science: (a) The Problem of Strategies of Volitional Control of Movement for Movement Quality and Movement Creativity (D. Temme, T. Temme, and D. Ercenk-Heimann); (b) Survey about the Effect of Speed Training for Tennis Players with and without New Tensile Strength-Training Equipment Called IVO (D. Meffert); and (c) Systematic Training of the Opening Shots in Tennis (R. Grambow). Peer-Reviewed Poster Abstracts include: (1) Influence of Some Social Characteristics of People with Intellectual Disabilities for Practicing Sport and Physical Activity in the Republic of Macedonia (I. Anastasovski, L. A. Velichkovska, V. Zivkovic, and A. Spirkosvki); (2) Mental Representation and Cognitive Intervention: A Systematic Comparison on the Effects of Action Observation and Motor Imagery on the Development of Mental Representation Structure and Skill Performance (T. Kim, C. Frank, and T. Schack); (3) "Dyed in the Wool" Competition and the Adaptation of Performance Routines in Self-Paced Tasks (K. Velentzas); (4) Mental Rotation of Tactical Instructions in Basketball Increases Processing Demand and Execution Inaccuracy (T. Koopmann, D. Krause, Y. Steffemann-Weinrich, and J. Baumeister); (5) Technique Feedback in Basketball: Individual Diagnostic System Based on Cognitive Representation (L. Vogel); (6) Gaze Control in Basketball Jump Shots and Free Throws (T. Zwierko, M. Popowczak, M. Wozniak, and A. Rokita); (7) Analysis of the Teaching-Learning Process and Procedural Tactical Knowledge in Mini-Basketball (J. C. Pérez-Morales, G. M. Praca, and P. J. Greco); (8) The Effect of Competitive Anxiety and Complexity of Task on the Processing Efficiency and Performance Effectiveness of Table-Tennis Players (M. G. Moghadam and S. M. Zadkhosh); (9) Soccer Small-Sided Games Manipulated by Representation: The Additional Player Effect (G. Praça, J. Morales, M. V. Silva, and P. Greco); (10) Covered Distance and Activity Profile of African Professional Soccer Players According to the Playing Position: Reports from Soccer World Cup 2014 (I. Hassan); (11) Rule Changes in Competitive Ball Games to Increase Game Participation of Players with Low Playing Skills (M. Kolb); (12) Behavioral Regulation in Coaches: A German Version of the Coach Motivation Questionnaire (CMQ-G) (C. Zepp, P. Schaffran, M. Kellmann, C. Mallett, and J. Kleinert); (13) Mentoring Grassroots Youth Participation Coaches toward a "Good Digital Game Design Features" Coaching Approach: An Ethnographic Account (A. Price); (14) Joint Action Imagery: The Influence of Mental Practice on the Functional Structuring of Tactical Skill Representations in Skilled Futsal Players (G.-L. Linstromberg, L. Hennig, T. Heinen, T. Schack, and C. Frank); (15) Enacting Change in a Secondary Physical Education Department (S. McGinley and G. Kanavos); (16) Sports Education in Brazil: Motriz Publications and References to TGfU (M. V. Euzebio, I. Scremin, and F. R. Costa); (17) Sports Education in Brazil: Movimento Publications and References to TGfU (I. Scremin, M. V. Euzebio, and F. R. Costa); (18) (Re)framing Physical Education Instruction for Students with Cognitive Disabilities Using the Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU) Model in Canadian High Schools (J. I. Anokwuru); (19) The Impact of the Educational Complex with Manner Mini-Educational Groups in Attack-Serving Skill Learning in Volleyball for Students (M. A. H. Ahmed and A. M. J. Ahmed); (20) Individual Training Control and Intervention in Young Elite Volleyball Athletes (M.-T. Fleddermann, H. Heppe, E. Eils, and K. Zentgraf); (21) Evaluation of Exercise "Field" Tests (6-Min Walk, Shuttle Test, Step Test) in Assessing Exercise Capacity in COPD and Heart Failure Populations: A Systematic Review (M. H. Kazr and A. H. Hadi); (22) The Relationship between Investing the Time of the Main Part in Lessons of Team Sports (Basketball, Volleyball, and Handball) and Direct and Indirect Teaching (M. H. Kazr and M. Al-Rubaei); (23) Position-Specific Psychological Profiles in Female Team Handball (J. Weber, M. Wegner, and V. Popa); (24) Endurance Capacities are Correlated with the Technical-Tactical Playing Performance in Elite Junior Team-Handball Players (J. Brochhagen, C. Baumgarten, J. Bauer, J. Freiwald, and M. W. Hoppe); (25) Decomposing Performance Factors in Jump Throws Reveals Subgroups of Handball Players with Specific Training Recommendations (J. M. Jäger, D. Büsch, and H. Müller); (26) Technical Performance Demands on the Different Playing Positions in Team Handball (J. Weber, M. Wegner, and B. Chittibabu); (27) Core Demands on the Goalkeeper Position in Female Team Handball (L. van Maanen-Coppens, J. Weber, and M. Wegner); (28) Position-Specific Conditional Demands in Female Team Handball (J. Weber, M. Wegner, and S. Fatulescu); (29) Tactical Demands in Female Team Handball on the Different Playing Positions (M. Wegner, J. Weber, and B. Chittibabu); (30) Hybrid Teaching Model (TGA 1 BS) in Badminton: Tactical and Technical Performance under Different Practice Distributions (L. M. C. Aburachid, S. R. Silva, L. M. S Morimoto, and P. J. Greco); (31) Impacts of an Experimental Scoring System in Badminton on Selected Aspects in Men's Singles (D. Hoffmann and C. Offermann); (32) Physiological Demands of Elite Ultimate Frisbee (M. Zimlich, L. Rüger, S. Wörrlein, and O. Hoos); (33) Kinematic Trends Observed at the Hip During Dynamic Jump Movements: Proficient Versus Nonproficient Jumpers (A. Eagles, M. Sayers, and D. Lovell); (34) China TGfU Academic Development Process of Information Science Theory: In 1994-2014 in a Range of Journals and Dissertations (H. Zeng, A.-Q. Liu, Y. Zhang, H. Tao, and Q.-Q. Dong); (35) The Role of Affordances in Developing Children's Manipulative Movement Skills: An Application of the Challenge-Point Framework (M. Balali and S. H. Parvinpour); (36) "Higher, Faster, Stronger?" An Empirical Study on the Pedagogical Content Knowledge of German PE Teachers (S. Meier); (37) A Pilot Application of TGfU in Sailing: Effects on Game Performance, Knowledge, and Adherence (M. T. Morales-Belando and J. L. Arias-Estero); (38) Effects of the Lifestyle Modification Program on Blood BDNF and Its Associated Factors in Korean Collegiate Students (J. Lee, B. Kang, and C. Park); (39) Relationship between Sport Participation Motivation and Teaching Games for Understanding among Novice Handball Players (M. Naimikia and A. Gholami); (40) Effect of the TGfU Approach on Motor Development and Social Maturity of Elementary School Students (A. Gholami and M. Naimikia); and (41) Effects of Dyad Training on Children's Learning of Front-Crawl Swimming (S. H. Parvinpour and M. Balali). Selected Practical Workshops include: (1) Playing with Purpose: Engaging Learners in Game Play through a Check, Connect, Reflect Approach (J. Sheppard and E. McGinley); (2) Lacrosse: Learning to Play the Game Quickly and Enjoyably (W. Piltz); (3) Hockey: Sport-Specific Warm-Up in Field Hockey (A. Krause); (4) eFUNiño: Innovative Training Control via LED Equipment in Soccer (J. Denis, D. Poimann, and M. Lochmann); (5) Tennis Australia Hot Shots Program Adhering to the Guiding Principles of the Game Sense Approach (M. Hewitt and S. Pill); (6) Inventing Games through Democracy in Action and Adaptation (J. Butler); (7) Playing Football TOGETHER: A Pupil-Centered Approach to Teaching Football in Physical Education (C. Heim and U. Frick); (8) Questioning in Game-Centered Approaches to Teaching and Coaching (S. Harvey); (9) Development of Cognitive Skills through Psychokinetic Games (E. Arias, W. Valencia, and O. Larrera); (10) Innovative Strategies for Challenging and Transforming Coaching and Teaching Practice (W. Piltz); (11) Coaching for Understanding at an Elite Level: Theory to Practice (J. Lambert); (12) Teaching Games in the Early Years: Weaving Complexivist and Play Discourses (H. Hussain); and (13) Opportunities for Integrating Attention Training in Daily Practice (D. J. Poimann and M. Lochmann). (Individual papers contain references.)
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- 2016
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42. Evaluating the Effectiveness of Combining the Use of Corrective Feedback and High-Level Practice Questions
- Author
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Fenesi, Barbara, Sana, Faria, and Kim, Joseph A.
- Abstract
A growing trend in teaching practices is to combine instructional techniques to optimize learning. If two instructional techniques can independently facilitate comprehension, it may be reasonable to assume that their combination would contribute to even greater learning. Here we examine the effects of using corrective feedback (present or absent) and practice questions (high level or low level) during initial learning on subsequent comprehension test performance. Results suggest that there was no added benefit from combining feedback with high-level practice questions. Providing feedback or practice questions were equally likely to benefit learners but the combination provided no additional benefit.
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- 2014
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43. Combining Best-Practice and Experimental Approaches: Redundancy, Images, and Misperceptions in Multimedia Learning
- Author
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Fenesi, Barbara, Heisz, Jennifer J., Savage, Philip I., Shore, David I., and Kim, Joseph A.
- Abstract
This experiment combined controlled experimental design with a best-practice approach (i.e., real course content, subjective evaluations) to clarify the role of verbal redundancy, confirm the multimodal impact of images and narration, and highlight discrepancies between actual and perceived understanding. The authors presented 1 of 3 computer-based lecture conditions: audio, redundant (audio with redundant text), or complementary (audio with nonredundant text and images). Audio and redundant conditions produced similar actual understanding, whereas the complementary condition produced greatest actual understanding. Redundant condition learners perceived their understanding as greater than their actual understanding. Findings encourage multimedia research to balance controlled experiments with a best-practice approach to better understand effective multimedia design.
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- 2014
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44. Exploring Undergraduate Disciplinary Writing: Expectations and Evidence in Psychology and Chemistry
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Moran, Katherine E.
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Research in the area of academic writing has demonstrated that writing varies significantly across disciplines and among genres within disciplines. Two important approaches to studying diversity in disciplinary academic writing have been the genre-based approach and the corpus-based approach. Genre studies have considered the situatedness of writing tasks, including the larger socio-cultural context of the discourse community (e.g., Berkenkotter & Huckin, 1995; Bhatia, 2004) as well as the move structure in specific genres like the research article (e.g., Swales, 1990, 2004). Corpus- based studies of disciplinary writing have focused more closely on the linguistic variation across registers, with the research article being the most widely studied register (e.g., Cortes, 2004; Gray, 2011). Studies of undergraduate writing in the disciplines have tended to focus on task classification (e.g., Braine, 1989; Horowitz, 1986a), literacy demands (e.g.,Carson, Chase, Gibson, & Hargrove, 1992), or student development (e.g., Carroll, 2002; Leki, 2007). The purpose of the present study is to build on these previous lines of research to explore undergraduate disciplinary writing from multiple perspectives in order to better prepare English language learners for the writing tasks they might encounter in their majors at a US university. Specifically, this exploratory study examines two disciplines: psychology and chemistry. Through writing task classification (following Horowitz, 1986), qualitative interviews with faculty and students in each discipline, and a corpus-based text analysis of course readings and upper-division student writing, the study yielded several important findings. With regard to writing tasks, psychology writing tasks showed more variety than chemistry. In addition, lower division classes had fewer writing assignments than upper division courses, particularly in psychology. The findings also showed a mismatch between the expectations of instructors in each discipline and students' understanding of such writing expectations. The linguistic analysis of course readings and student writing demonstrated differences in language use both between registers and across disciplines. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2013
45. Investigating Insight as Sudden Learning
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Ash, Ivan K., Jee, Benjamin D., and Wiley, Jennifer
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Gestalt psychologists proposed two distinct learning mechanisms. Associative learning occurs gradually through the repeated co-occurrence of external stimuli or memories. Insight learning occurs suddenly when people discover new relationships within their prior knowledge as a result of reasoning or problem solving processes that re-organize or restructure that knowledge. While there has been a considerable amount of research on the type of problem solving processes described by the Gestalt psychologists, less has focused on the learning that results from these processes. This paper begins with a historical review of the Gestalt theory of insight learning. Next, the core assumptions of Gestalt insight learning theory are empirically tested with a study that investigated the relationships among problem difficulty, impasse, initial problem representations, and resolution effects. Finally, Gestalt insight learning theory is discussed in relation to modern information processing theories of comprehension and memory formation.
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- 2012
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46. The Psychological Dimension of Transformation in Teacher Learning
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Maclellan, Effie
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Against a background which recognises pedagogical content knowledge as the distinctive element of teacher competence/expertise, this theoretical essay argues for its central construct--that of transformation--to be understood by teachers and teacher educators in psychological terms (as was originally proposed by Dewey). Transformation requires teachers to fashion disciplinary knowledge such that it is accessible to the learner. It is argued that for transformation to happen, teacher thinking must include a sophisticated grasp of cognition and metacognition if teachers are to be characterised as competent, let alone expert. This article is written within a context of considerable social and academic scrutiny in the UK of the form and content of professional teacher preparation and development. In recent years, the contribution of psychological knowledge to teacher education has been filtered through procedural lenses of how best to "manage classrooms", "assess learning", "build confidence" or whatever without a matched concern for psychological constructs through which such issues might be interpreted; thus, leaving teachers vulnerable in their professional understandings of learning and its complexities. That society now requires high-level cognitive engagement amongst its participants places cognitive and metacognitive demands on teachers which can only be met if they themselves are conceptually equipped. (Contains 1 table.)
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- 2012
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47. Evaluation of Fostering Students' Creativity in Preparing Aided Recalls for Revision Courses Using Electronic Revision and Recapitulation Tools 2.0
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Christ, Oliver, Weber, Christoph, and Sato, Toshihiko
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In this study, the electronic revision and recapitulation tools 2.0 (EREP 2.0) were used to foster creative moments while creating aided recalls (ARs) (pictures electronic notes etc.). Creative and critical thinking is associated with vital skills which enable students to deal with often complex knowledge domains through an informal way of learning. Enabling learners to develop their own representations of information can be a first step to deal with complexity and to foster creativity. In an exploratory study, n = 25 students used EREP 2.0 to develop learning questions and ARs for an ongoing course on biological psychology. EREP 2.0 was evaluated with respect to user friendliness, the fostering of creativity and the expected support for cognitive skills according to Bloom's taxonomy. The influence of students' experienced creativity on experienced learning support was tested via Kruskal-Wallis test. Fifteen students reported moderate to high, 4 students low and 5 students no support in creativity. Students who experienced their work as creative felt better supported in comprehension, x[superscript 2](3 = 9.04; p = 0.029, and synthesis, x[superscript 2](3) = 9.46; p = 0.024. No statistically significant effects were found for other categories of Bloom's taxonomy. EREP 2.0 did support the experience of creativity and thus synthesis and comprehension skills. (Contains 3 figures and 2 tables.)
- Published
- 2012
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48. Retrieval Experience as a Modifier of Future Encoding: Another Test Effect
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Bjork, Elizabeth Ligon and Storm, Benjamin C.
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Research on how individuals monitor their level of comprehension during study paints a picture of learners as being insensitive to many of the factors or conditions of learning that can enhance long-term retention and transfer. In previous research, however, deWinstanley and Bjork (2004) demonstrated that learners--if made sensitive to the memorial benefits of generation in the context of an informative test following study of a text passage in which they had encoded both to-be-read and to-be-generated critical items--then became more effective processors of future to-be-read information presented in a 2nd text passage. In Experiments 1 and 2 of the present research, we explored the potential applicability of this effect by testing whether it could survive certain types of activity-filled delays. In Experiments 3 and 4, we tested whether enhanced processing of contextual information, an encoding strategy that could possibly have been discovered by participants during the testing episode for the 1st text passage, was a potential underlying cause of this effect. Together, our results bring to light an additional benefit of test taking and point to what might be considered necessary and sufficient conditions for leading learners to become more effective processors of future to-be-learned information. (Contains 2 tables.)
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- 2011
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49. Moral Psychology Is Relationship Regulation: Moral Motives for Unity, Hierarchy, Equality, and Proportionality
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Rai, Tage Shakti and Fiske, Alan Page
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Genuine moral disagreement exists and is widespread. To understand such disagreement, we must examine the basic kinds of social relationships people construct across cultures and the distinct moral obligations and prohibitions these relationships entail. We extend relational models theory (Fiske, 1991) to identify 4 fundamental and distinct moral motives. Unity is the motive to care for and support the integrity of in-groups by avoiding or eliminating threats of contamination and providing aid and protection based on need or empathic compassion. Hierarchy is the motive to respect rank in social groups where superiors are entitled to deference and respect but must also lead, guide, direct, and protect subordinates. Equality is the motive for balanced, in-kind reciprocity, equal treatment, equal say, and equal opportunity. Proportionality is the motive for rewards and punishments to be proportionate to merit, benefits to be calibrated to contributions, and judgments to be based on a utilitarian calculus of costs and benefits. The 4 moral motives are universal, but cultures, ideologies, and individuals differ in where they activate these motives and how they implement them. Unlike existing theories (Haidt, 2007; Hauser, 2006; Turiel, 1983), relationship regulation theory predicts that any action, including violence, unequal treatment, and "impure" acts, may be perceived as morally correct depending on the moral motive employed and how the relevant social relationship is construed. This approach facilitates clearer understanding of moral perspectives we disagree with and provides a template for how to influence moral motives and practices in the world. (Contains 4 footnotes.)
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- 2011
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50. The Effect of Perspective on Misconceptions in Psychology: A Test of Conceptual Change Theory
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Amsel, Eric, Johnston, Adam, and Alvarado, Elly
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To test whether students' knowledge about psychology undergoes a conceptual change when learning about the discipline, 227 Introductory Psychology students from six different classes were given the Psychology as a Science (PAS) Scale in one of two conditions. Students were randomly assigned to complete the questionnaire from their own (Self Condition) or their psychology professor's (Professor Condition) perspective. As predicted, results show scores on the PAS Scale were higher, reflecting greater appreciation for psychology as a science, in the Psychology Professor than the Self condition. These results suggest that learning psychology may be less about "reflecting on and revising" misconceptions and more about "sorting out" which beliefs are associated with scientific psychology and which with students' own intuitive understanding of the discipline. (Contains 1 table and 1 figure.)
- Published
- 2009
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