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Showing 166 to 180 of 274 results Save | Export
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Schwartz, Bennett L.; Boduroglu, Aysecan; Tekcan, Ali I. – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
In traditional feeling-of-knowing procedures, participants make judgments on unrecalled items only (e.g. Hart 1965). However, many researchers elicit feeling-of-knowing judgments (FOKs) on all items. When FOKs are made on all items, participants may use recall as a basis for judgments, leading to higher magnitude judgments for recalled items, but…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Metacognition, Methods, Prediction
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Máñez, Ignacio; Vidal-Abarca, Eduardo; Kendeou, Panayiota; Martínez, Tomás – Metacognition and Learning, 2019
The goal of this study was to examine how students process formative feedback that included corrective and elaborative information in online question-answering tasks. Skilled and less-skilled comprehenders in grade 8 read texts and answered comprehension questions. Prior to responding, students were asked to select the textual information relevant…
Descriptors: Formative Evaluation, Feedback (Response), Questioning Techniques, Task Analysis
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Temelman-Yogev, Lilach; Katzir, Tami; Prior, Anat – Metacognition and Learning, 2020
Success in higher education is highly dependent on students' ability to efficiently read and comprehend large amounts of text in the speaker's first/native language (L1) and also in a Foreign Language (FL). Good text comprehension requires readers to implement a variety of metacognitive processes in order to self-regulate understanding. However,…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Second Language Learning, Language Processing, Native Language
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Rummer, Ralf; Schweppe, Judith; Schwede, Annett – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
Recently, Diemand-Yauman et al. "Cognition," 118, 114-118 (2011) demonstrated that learning with disfluent (hard-to-read) materials is more effective than learning with easy-to-read materials--a study that has since stipulated a number of follow-up studies (with mixed results). However, there is a potential confound in the original…
Descriptors: Outcomes of Education, Metacognition, Reading Materials, Followup Studies
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Perry, Nancy E. – Metacognition and Learning, 2019
Research in educational and developmental psychology offers evidence that children are developing basic capacities (i.e., executive functions) for self-regulating long before they receive formal instruction in school. Importantly, the evidence indicates self-regulation is a strong predictor of outcomes in early childhood and across the lifespan.…
Descriptors: Young Children, Self Management, Executive Function, Child Development
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Jemstedt, Andreas; Kubik, Veit; Jönsson, Fredrik U. – Metacognition and Learning, 2017
When people begin to study new material, they may first judge how difficult it will be to learn. Surprisingly, these "ease of learning" (EOL) judgments have received little attention by metacognitive researchers so far. The aim of this study was to systematically investigate how well EOL judgments can predict actual learning, and what…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Decision Making, Comparative Analysis, Correlation
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Callender, Aimee A.; Franco-Watkins, Ana M.; Roberts, Andrew S. – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
Accurately judging one's performance in the classroom can be challenging considering most students tend to be overconfident and overestimate their actual performance. The current work draws upon the metacognition and decision making literatures to examine improving metacognition in the classroom. Using historical data from several semesters of an…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Decision Making, Undergraduate Students, Feedback (Response)
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Paans, Cindy; Onan, Erdem; Molenaar, Inge; Verhoeven, Ludo; Segers, Eliane – Metacognition and Learning, 2019
The present study investigated the extent to which 18 dyads in 5th and 6th grade, who experienced low levels of social challenge, differed from 12 dyads who experience high levels of social challenge in terms of the quality of their written assignment, as well as the frequency and sequential pattern of their cognitive, metacognitive, relational,…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Grade 5, Grade 6, Hypermedia
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Tsalas, Nike; Sodian, Beate; Paulus, Markus – Metacognition and Learning, 2017
Metacognitive control is an important factor for successful learning and has been shown to increase across childhood and adolescence. Only few studies have attempted to investigate the cognitive processes and psychological mechanisms that subserve metacognitively-based control and the development thereof. Accordingly, the aim of the current study…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Children, Adults, Correlation
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Hughes, Gregory I.; Taylor, Holly A.; Thomas, Ayanna K. – Metacognition and Learning, 2018
The ways in which adult learners study information influences their judgment-of-learning (JOL) accuracy (e.g., Koriat et al. "Journal of Experimental Psychology: General," determine whether developing learners' metacognitive monitoring is similarly influenced by different study techniques. In two experiments, we examined JOL accuracy in…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Metacognition, College Students, Adolescents
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Marulis, Loren M.; Palincsar, Annemarie Sullivan; Berhenke, Amanda L.; Whitebread, David – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
Historically, early cognitive skills have been underestimated, largely as a result of the ways these competencies have been measured, which is particularly pervasive in the area of metacognition. Only recently have researchers begun to detect evidence of contextualized metacognition in 3-5 year old preschool children through the use of…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Preschool Children, Interviews, Thinking Skills
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Lehmann, Janina; Goussios, Christina; Seufert, Tina – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
According to Cognitive Load Theory, learning material should be designed in a way to decrease unnecessary demands on working memory (WM). However, recent research has shown that additional demands on WM caused by less legible texts lead to better learning outcomes. This so-called disfluency effect can be assumed as a metacognitive regulation…
Descriptors: Difficulty Level, Cognitive Processes, Short Term Memory, Metacognition
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Green, Sean R.; Redford, Joshua – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
The "familiarity effect" (Shen and Reingold, "Perception & Psychophysics" 63(3):464-475, 2001) is a phenomenon in which unfamiliar symbols perceptually "pop-out" when placed among familiar symbols (e.g., letters). In contrast, searching for familiar symbols among unfamiliar symbols is more challenging. Failure to…
Descriptors: Familiarity, Metacognition, Accuracy, Alphabets
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Wolters, Christopher A.; Won, Sungjun; Hussain, Maryam – Metacognition and Learning, 2017
The primary goal of this study was to investigate whether college students' academic time management could be used to understand their engagement in traditional and active forms of procrastination within a model of self-regulated learning. College students (N = 446) completed a self-report survey that assessed motivational and strategic aspects of…
Descriptors: Time Management, Metacognition, Predictor Variables, College Students
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Sidi, Yael; Ophir, Yael; Ackerman, Rakefet – Metacognition and Learning, 2016
Screen inferiority in performance and metacognitive processes has been repeatedly found with text learning. Common explanations for screen inferiority relate to technological and physiological disadvantages associated with extensive reading on screen. However, recent studies point to lesser recruitment of mental effort on screen than on paper.…
Descriptors: Mass Media Effects, Metacognition, Experiments, Problem Solving
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