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Maria Fana Mejia; Brendan Murray; Jeffrey A. Webb; Andrew G. Karatjas – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2025
Interest in the gender gap in the physical sciences has been ongoing for a number of years. This study aimed to explore differences in gender based on self-perception. The use of a post-examination survey was used to examine the role of gender in grade perception in chemistry courses over a several-year period. This included courses for…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Science Instruction, Chemistry, Test Results
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Vahe Permzadian; Kit W. Cho – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
When administering an in-class exam, a common decision that confronts every instructor is whether the exam format should be closed book or open book. The present review synthesizes research examining the effect of administering closed-book or open-book assessments on long-term learning. Although the overall effect of assessment format on learning…
Descriptors: College Students, Tests, Test Format, Long Term Memory
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Spencer, Dan; Nietfeld, John L.; Cao, Li; Difrancesca, Daniell – Journal of Experimental Education, 2023
Understanding the development of self-regulated learning (SRL) in applied educational contexts is currently an important goal for researchers. There exists a relatively rich literature for most SRL components in isolation yet the field is lacking in understanding their coordination. This study examined the relationship between metacognitive…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Metacognition, Progress Monitoring, Attribution Theory
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Claudio, David; Bakke, Morten – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
This research explores the effects of listening to music during exams for engineering college students. Students were given the option to listen to self-selected music while completing exams in three undergraduate engineering courses over four years. It was found that listening to music during an exam had no significant effect on the mean exam…
Descriptors: Music, Listening, Equal Education, Scores
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Bryan C. Tyner; Steven D. Floumanhaft; Ramon Marin; Daniel M. Fienup – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 2024
Little research has examined specific instructional variables that influence the development and effectiveness of task-analysis instruction. We conducted two experiments using text-based task analyses to teach college students to create single-subject reversal design graphs. In Experiment 1, we tested the effects of presenting antecedent and…
Descriptors: College Students, Instructional Design, Instructional Effectiveness, Teaching Methods
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Cláudio Manoel Ferreira Leite; Herbert Ugrinowitsch; Crislaine Rangel Couto – Journal of Motor Learning and Development, 2024
Knowledge of results (KR), particularly its informational role, has often been regarded as redundant for learning interception-like tasks, such as coincidence-anticipation timing tasks. However, it is possible that the KR's guiding effect might be detrimental to motor adaptation, instead of only redundant, leading to a dependency on KR and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Psychomotor Skills, Motor Development
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Jason M. Scott; Joshua L. Jackson; Andrea M. Pals – AERA Open, 2024
Law schools are held accountable on many fronts to achieve and maintain high bar passage rates. While the course of legal education itself, along with various interventions, is a key driver of bar exam performance, Bahadur et al. (2021) suggests that obscure institutional practices might be inflating institutional bar passage performance. Such…
Descriptors: Law Schools, Law Students, Test Results, Transfer Students
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Bauer, Thomas; Biehler, Rolf; Lankeit, Elisa – International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 2023
Peer Instruction, first introduced by Eric Mazur in the late '90s, is a method aiming at active student participation in lectures. It includes conceptual questions (so-called ConcepTests) presented to the students, who vote on answer alternatives presented to them and then discuss their answers in small groups. As professors have been reported to…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Peer Teaching, Discussion, Tests
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Fuyu Kong; Yanli Zhang – SAGE Open, 2024
To explore the washback of the HSK on students learning Chinese as a Second Language (CSL), the study surveyed 1,616 SCL students from 25 different mother tongue backgrounds and interviewed international students studying in China through questionnaire and interview. The following was found in this study: (a) The HSK influenced both the process…
Descriptors: Chinese, Language Tests, Language Proficiency, Second Language Learning
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Brian C. Leventhal; Dena Pastor – Educational and Psychological Measurement, 2024
Low-stakes test performance commonly reflects examinee ability and effort. Examinees exhibiting low effort may be identified through rapid guessing behavior throughout an assessment. There has been a plethora of methods proposed to adjust scores once rapid guesses have been identified, but these have been plagued by strong assumptions or the…
Descriptors: College Students, Guessing (Tests), Multiple Choice Tests, Item Response Theory
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José Manuel García; David Sánchez-Porras; Miguel Etayo-Escanilla; Paula Ávila-Fernández; Olimpia Ortiz-Arrabal; Miguel-Ángel Martín-Piedra; Fernando Campos; Óscar-Darío García-García; Jesús Chato-Astrain; Miguel Alaminos – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
The recent coronavirus disease (COVID-19) forced pre-university professionals to modify the educational system. This work aimed to determine the effects of pandemic situation on students' access to medical studies by comparing the performance of medical students. We evaluated the performance of students enrolled in a subject taught in the first…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, College Freshmen, Medical Education
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Larry Katz; Dave Carlgren; Cory Wright-Maley; Megan Hallam; Joan Forder; Danielle Milner; Lisa Finestone – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2024
Student-generated questions can be an effective study technique to improve active learning, metacognitive skills, and performance on examinations. Students have shown greater success when assessed using peer-made study questions than when studying without questions. In three semesters of a kinesiology research methods course students were taught…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Kinesiology, Multiple Choice Tests, Student Developed Materials
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James T. Davis; Kristina Adams; Ashley Morgan – Advances in Physiology Education, 2024
Assessing student mastery is often done by using exams. Inevitably, some students will complete remediation, which may include exam retakes. This method provides students an additional opportunity to take an exam that assesses the same objectives as the original exam, while using different questions. Although this form of remediation increases…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Public Colleges, Physiology, Test Preparation
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Gonzalez, Fernando – Education and Information Technologies, 2023
The study of robotics has become a popular course among many educational programs, especially as a technical elective. A significant part of this course involves having the students learn how to program the movement of a robotic arm by controlling the velocity of its individual joint motors, a topic referred to as joint programming. They must…
Descriptors: Robotics, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Simulation
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Stephen Bok; James Shum; Maria Lee – Journal of Marketing Education, 2024
Time management is essential for strong strategic business planning and marketing campaigns. Having sufficient time to complete essential planning is important, as is the punctuality of meeting deadlines. Temporal Motivation Theory (TMT) explains the relationship between deciding to perform a task and expected incentives, consequences, and the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Business Administration Education, Electronic Learning, Time Management
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