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Baze, Christina; González-Howard, María; Sampson, Vic; Fenech, Mic; Crawford, Rich; Hutner, Todd; Chu, Lawrence; Hamilton, Xiaofen – Science Education, 2023
Recent trends have shifted the focus of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education onto practice-based learning, to encourage opportunities for students to engage in science and engineering practices (SEPs) with the goal of more meaningful participation and engagement in authentic STEM experiences for all students. However,…
Descriptors: Engineering, Design, STEM Education, Middle School Students
Gough, David – Review of Research in Education, 2021
For research evidence to inform decision making, an appraisal needs to be made of whether the claims are justified and whether they are useful to the decisions being made. This chapter provides a high level framework of core issues relevant to appraising the "fitness for purpose" of evidence claims. The framework includes (I) the…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Evidence, Research Methodology, Ethics
Pehlivanoglu, Didem; Lin, Tian; Deceus, Farha; Heemskerk, Amber; Ebner, Natalie C.; Cahill, Brian S. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
Aim: Previous research has focused on accuracy associated with real and fake news presented in the form of news headlines only, which does not capture the rich context news is frequently encountered in real life. Additionally, while previous studies on evaluation of real and fake news have mostly focused on characteristics of the evaluator (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Critical Reading, Evaluative Thinking, Credibility
Ding, Zhuolei; Jiang, Ting; Chen, Chuansheng; Murty, Vishnu P.; Xue, Jingming; Zhang, Mingxia – Learning & Memory, 2021
Recent studies have revealed that memory performance is better when participants have the opportunity to make a choice regarding the experimental task (choice condition) than when they do not have such a choice (fixed condition). These studies, however, used intentional memory tasks, leaving open the question whether the choice effect also applies…
Descriptors: Memory, Decision Making, Intention, Incidental Learning
Rutchick, Abraham M.; Ross, Bryan J.; Calvillo, Dustin P.; Mesick, Catherine C. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2020
The "surprisingly popular" method (SP) of aggregating individual judgments has shown promise in overcoming a weakness of other crowdsourcing methods--situations in which the majority is incorrect. This method relies on participants' estimates of other participants' judgments; when an option is chosen more often than the average…
Descriptors: Prediction, Predictive Measurement, Evaluative Thinking, Metacognition
Helm, Rebecca K.; Growns, Bethany – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
Jurors often have to make decisions about whether they believe a complainant's or defendant's account of an event. However, the relative ambiguity of cues in testimony creates a situation where juror evaluations can vary significantly. As a result, in cases heavily reliant on testimony there is a particular likelihood that juror characteristics…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Individual Differences, Public Speaking, Decision Making
Leins, Drew A.; Zimmerman, Laura A.; Vowels, Christopher L. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
This study explored the decision-making processes of soldiers as they evaluated scenarios containing information offering various levels of certainty. Soldiers with different levels of experience read scenarios that presented potential threats and then identified the priority threat, their confidence in this identification, and the cues they used…
Descriptors: Experience, Ambiguity (Semantics), Ambiguity (Context), Hypothesis Testing
Rodriguez, Dario N.; Berry, Melissa A. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
Counterfactual thinking is a form of mental simulation that informs causal judgments regarding the role antecedent events played in producing present outcomes. We examined whether inducing participants to think counterfactually about a case involving eyewitness evidence would sensitize them to variations in eyewitness evidence quality.…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Evaluative Thinking, Logical Thinking, Evidence
Jordan D. Bader – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Socioscientific issues (SSIs), or controversial scientific issues with social implications, influence members of society regardless of demographic. SSIs are contentious and ill-structured, meaning they do not have a definitive answer. To properly equip students with the tools needed to handle SSIs, undergraduate science curricula emphasize…
Descriptors: Science and Society, Decision Making, Undergraduate Students, Epistemology
Giving a Larger Amount or a Larger Proportion: Stimulus Format Impacts Children's Social Evaluations
Hurst, Michelle A.; Shaw, Alex; Chernyak, Nadia; Levine, Susan C. – Developmental Psychology, 2020
Young children show remarkably sophisticated abilities to evaluate others. Yet their abilities to engage in proportional moral evaluation undergoes protracted development. Namely, young children evaluate someone who shares "absolutely" more as being "nicer" than someone who shares "proportionally" more (e.g., sharing…
Descriptors: Young Children, Adults, Decision Making, Moral Values
Ziebell, Natasha; Skeat, Jemma – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2020
The Evidence-based Reasoning model is a systematic inquiry into student learning to determine what interventions are required in classroom contexts. The four step process includes noticing students who need additional support in their learning, the use of assessment data to establish an evidence-base, and subsequent interpretation that leads to…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Evaluative Thinking, Decision Making, Intervention
van de Pol, Janneke; van den Boom-Muilenburg, Selia N.; van Gog, Tamara – Metacognition and Learning, 2021
This study investigated teachers' monitoring and regulation of students' learning from texts. According to the cue-utilization framework (Koriat, in Journal of Experimental Psychology, 126, 349-370, 1997), monitoring accuracy depends on how predictive the information (or cues) that teachers use to make monitoring judgments actually is for…
Descriptors: Cues, Reading Comprehension, Teaching Methods, Accuracy
Nathan Mentzer; Wonki Lee; Andrew Jackson; Scott Bartholomew – International Journal of Technology and Design Education, 2024
Adaptive comparative judgment (ACJ) has been widely used to evaluate classroom artifacts with reliability and validity. In the ACJ experience we examined, students were provided a pair of images related to backpack design. For each pair, students were required to select which image could help them ideate better. Then, they were prompted to provide…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Design, Engineering Education, Evaluation Methods
Beghetto, Ronald A.; Anderson, Ross C. – Education Sciences, 2022
The purpose of this article is to introduce an action-oriented framework aimed at clarifying and promoting a principled approach to creativity in education. A principled approach to creativity refers to the design and implementation of positive creative educational endeavors, which are guided by a set of agreed-upon commitments aimed at making a…
Descriptors: Creativity, Psychology, Well Being, Intention
Tangen, Jason M.; Kent, Kirsty M.; Searston, Rachel A. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2020
When a fingerprint is located at a crime scene, a human examiner is counted upon to manually compare this print to those stored in a database. Several experiments have now shown that these professional analysts are highly accurate, but not infallible, much like other fields that involve high-stakes decision-making. One method to offset mistakes in…
Descriptors: Crime, Identification, Human Body, Evaluators