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Chyung, Seung Youn; Winiecki, Donald J.; Downing, Jessica L. – Performance Improvement Quarterly, 2010
Ethical concerns are rising in the business world. With this in mind, training and performance improvement practitioners, especially during evaluation projects, should be aware of principles and codes of ethics, and their behaviors and decisions should reflect the standards recognized by members of the professional society. A study was conducted…
Descriptors: Evaluators, Ethics, Performance Technology, Case Method (Teaching Technique)
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Kommers, Piet, Ed.; Issa, Tomayess, Ed.; Isaías, Pedro, Ed.; Hui, Wendy, Ed. – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2019
These proceedings contain the papers and poster of the 6th International Conference on Educational Technologies 2019 (ICEduTech 2019), which has been organised by the International Association for Development of the Information Society and co-organised by the Lingnan University, in Hong Kong, February 8-10, 2019. ICEduTech is the scientific…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Elementary School Students, Reflection, Computer Mediated Communication
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Kuhn, Deanna – Educational Research Review, 2009
In this theoretical essay, the author addresses the existence of divergent evidence, portraying both competence and lack of competence in a fundamental realm of higher order thinking--causal and scientific reasoning--and explores the educational implications. Evidence indicates that these higher order reasoning skills are not ones that can be…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Causal Models, Educational Objectives, Curriculum
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Kaplan, Jennifer K. – Journal of Statistics Education, 2009
Psychologists have discovered a phenomenon called "Belief Bias" in which subjects rate the strength of arguments based on the believability of the conclusions. This paper reports the results of a small qualitative pilot study of undergraduate students who had previously taken an algebra-based introduction to statistics class. The subjects in this…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Beliefs, Bias, Evaluative Thinking
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Nasstrom, Gunilla – International Journal of Research & Method in Education, 2009
In education, standards have to be interpreted, for planning of teaching, for development of assessments and for alignment analysis. In most cases, it is important that there is an agreement between individuals and organizations about how to interpret standards. However, there is a lack of studies of how consistent different group of judges are…
Descriptors: Classification, Standards, Evaluation Criteria, Interrater Reliability
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White, Peter A. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2008
When people make causal judgments from contingency information, a principal aim is to account for occurrences of the outcome. When 2 causes are under consideration, the capacity of either to account for occurrences is judged from how likely the cause is to be present when the outcome occurs and from the rate at which the outcome occurs when that…
Descriptors: Prediction, Influences, Evaluative Thinking, Weighted Scores
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Shtulman, Andrew; Carey, Susan – Child Development, 2007
The present study investigated the development of possibility-judgment strategies between the ages of 4 and 8. In Experiment 1, 48 children and 16 adults were asked whether a variety of extraordinary events could or could not occur in real life. Although children of all ages denied the possibility of events that adults also judged impossible,…
Descriptors: Young Children, Adults, Logical Thinking, Evaluative Thinking
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Sieck, Winston R.; Merkle, Edgar C.; Van Zandt, Trisha – Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 2007
The ASC model of choice and confidence in general knowledge proposes that respondents first Assess the familiarity of presented options, and then use the high-familiarity option as a retrieval cue to Search memory for the purposes of Constructing an explanation about why that high-familiarity option is true. The ASC process implies that…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Selection, Confidence Testing, Cues
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Kahneman, Daniel; Klein, Gary – American Psychologist, 2009
This article reports on an effort to explore the differences between two approaches to intuition and expertise that are often viewed as conflicting: heuristics and biases (HB) and naturalistic decision making (NDM). Starting from the obvious fact that professional intuition is sometimes marvelous and sometimes flawed, the authors attempt to map…
Descriptors: Intuition, Heuristics, Bias, Decision Making
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Feinberg, Adam B.; Shapiro, Edward S. – Journal of Educational Research, 2009
The authors asked 74 teachers to predict average- and low-performing students' reading performance using a rating scale and actual curriculum-based measures of oral reading fluency. The authors compared teachers' judgments with students' performance on curriculum-based measures and a standardized achievement measure of reading. Comparisons between…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Special Needs Students, Prediction, Teacher Expectations of Students
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Shanahan, Lynn – Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education (CITE Journal), 2012
The purpose of this interpretive case study was to explore--through a close analysis of one class project--students' use of audio signs and the teacher's scaffolding of the use of audio signs. Two research questions guided this study: (a) In what ways did the fifth-grade students use audio signs, specifically transitions sounds, when constructing…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 5, Student Centered Curriculum, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
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Van Acker, Frederik; Theuns, Peter – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2010
Information Integration Theory (IIT) is concerned with how people combine information into an overall judgment. A method is hereby presented to perform Functional Measurement (FM) experiments, the methodological counterpart of IIT, on the Web. In a comparison of Web-based FM experiments, face-to-face experiments, and computer-based experiments in…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Internet, Laboratory Experiments, Computer Assisted Testing
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Zhao, Qin; Linderholm, Tracy – Educational Psychology Review, 2008
The objective of this paper is to review and synthesize two interrelated topics in the adult metacomprehension literature: the bases of metacomprehension judgment and the constraints on metacomprehension accuracy. Our review shows that adult readers base their metacomprehension judgments on different types of information, including experiences…
Descriptors: Adults, Reading Comprehension, Metacognition, Evaluative Thinking
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Peebles, David – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2008
Two experiments investigated effects of emergent features on perceptual judgments of comparative magnitude in three diagrammatic representations: kiviat charts, bar graphs, and line graphs. Experiment 1 required participants to compare individual values; whereas in Experiment 2 participants had to integrate several values to produce a global…
Descriptors: Graphs, Charts, Evaluative Thinking, Comparative Analysis
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Momo, Kanako; Sakai, Hiromu; Sakai, Kuniyoshi L. – Brain and Language, 2008
Native languages (L1s) are tacitly assumed to be complete and stable in adults. Here we report an unexpected individual variation in judgment of L1 regarding Japanese sentences including honorification, and further clarify its neural basis with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). By contrasting an honorification judgment task with a…
Descriptors: Sentences, Syntax, Languages, Japanese
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