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Dilek Karisan; Ingo Eilks – Journal of Pedagogical Research, 2023
Developments in science and technology enrich life in the 21st century. To cope with life in society, reflective judgment and decision-making abilities on both the individual and societal levels are needed. Schools must prepare the younger generations to become responsible citizens who are able to make reflective judgments. This study elaborates…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preservice Teachers, Decision Making Skills, Evaluative Thinking
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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
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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
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Domgaard, Shawn; Park, Mina – Health Education Journal, 2021
Objective: False news about vaccination shared in digital spaces is a major problem that harms informed health choices. Drawing from processing fluency theory, we propose that an infographic -- a visual representation of information -- reduces cognitive load, thereby helping people retain and process the necessary information to discern truth from…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Immunization Programs, Misconceptions
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Berber, Asiye; Kurtulus, Aytaç – International Journal of Progressive Education, 2021
The aim of this study is to evaluate the cognitive levels of pre-service science teachers according to Bloom's Taxonomy about "density" using daily life problems. The case study design was used in the study. This study was carried out with 45 pre-service teachers. In order to identify the cognitive levels of pre-service teachers about…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Cognitive Processes, Taxonomy, Thinking Skills
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Hawe, Eleanor; Dixon, Helen; Murray, Jill; Chandler, Sandra – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2021
While it is argued that use of rubrics and exemplars has the potential to develop students' ability to distinguish quality, make evaluative judgments and take productive action, few studies have directly investigated the latter. To address this gap the current study employed classroom observations, eight focus groups interviews with 18 students…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Student Writing Models, Thinking Skills, Learning Strategies
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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
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Gustafsson, Philip U.; Lindholm, Torun; Jönsson, Fredrik U. – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2021
Recent research has shown that incorrect statements in eyewitness testimonies contain more cues to effortful memory retrieval than correct statements. In two experiments, we attempted to improve judgments of testimony accuracy by informing participants about these effort cues. Participants read eyewitness testimony transcripts and judged statement…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Recall (Psychology), Cues, Evaluative Thinking
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Crozier, William E.; Strange, Deryn – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2019
Decades of memory research have demonstrated a dire need for effective methods of correcting misinformation, particularly once it has been encoded. However, much of this research has exposed participants to misinformation first then provided a correction, and used indirect memory questions. Using a misinformation effect (ME) paradigm, in which…
Descriptors: Memory, Misconceptions, Error Patterns, Error Correction
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Aßfalg, André; Klauer, Karl Christoph – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2019
We consider the proposition that reasoners represent causal conditionals such as "if John studies hard, he will do well in the test" as a causal model in which the antecedent ("John studies hard") is a potential cause of the consequent ("John does well in the test"). Some studies suggest that reasoners ignore…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Causal Models, Evaluative Thinking, Probability
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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
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Melike Acar; Ozce Sivis; Vincent H. Sienkiewicz – European Journal of Developmental Psychology, 2024
This study examined children's emotion attributions and moral judgements to hypothetical procedural justice outcomes when the candidates were equal in merit but different in need. Children (7 to 11 years old, N = 88) were presented with four vignettes depicting resource-rich and resource-poor candidates losing educational materials and…
Descriptors: Social Class, Social Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development
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Sampaio, Cristina; Wang, Ranxiao Frances – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
People's expectations help them make judgments about the world. In the area of spatial memory, the interaction of existing knowledge with incoming information is best illustrated in the category effect, a bias in positioning a target toward the prototypical location of its region (Huttenlocher et al., 1991). According to Bayesian principles, these…
Descriptors: Expectation, Probability, Spatial Ability, Memory
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Aminah, Neneng; Sukestiyarno, Yohanes Leonardus; Wardono, Wardono; Cahyono, Adi Nur – European Journal of Educational Research, 2022
Prospective teachers facing the 21st century are expected to have the ability to solve problems with a computer mindset. Problems in learning mathematics also require the concept of computational thinking (CT). However, many still find it challenging to solve this problem. The subjects in this study were twenty-one prospective mathematics teachers…
Descriptors: Computation, Thinking Skills, Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Teachers
Julianne Zemaitis – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Despite acknowledgement in the data-informed decision making (DIDM) literature that data use is not a purely rational process, there has been little attention paid to the role of values and normative factors that underpin school improvement planning (SIP) processes and little consideration of the inherent evaluative nature of associated activities…
Descriptors: Data Use, Educational Improvement, Educational Planning, Evaluative Thinking
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