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Lee, Yongseong; Jeong, Su Keun – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2023
During the COVID-19 pandemic, face masks have been widely used in daily life. Previous studies have suggested that faces wearing typical masks that occlude the lower half of the face are perceived as more attractive than face without masks. However, relatively little work has been done on how transparent masks that reveal the lower half of the…
Descriptors: Human Body, Hygiene, Disease Control, Health Behavior
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Chang, Minyu; Brainerd, C. J. – Metacognition and Learning, 2023
Making judgments of learning (JOLs) can sometimes modify subsequent memory performance, which is referred to as JOL reactivity. We evaluated two major theoretical explanations of JOL reactivity and used the dual-retrieval model to pinpoint the retrieval processes that are modified by JOLs. The changed-goal hypothesis assumes that JOLs highlight…
Descriptors: Cues, Evaluative Thinking, Models, Recall (Psychology)
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Todd, E. Michelle; Higgs, Cory A.; Mumford, Michael D. – Creativity Research Journal, 2023
Idea evaluation has been identified as a critical step in the creative problem-solving process. Yet, it is unclear how exactly individuals evaluate and compensate for weaknesses in their creative ideas. In the present study, both qualitative and quantitative methods were used to identify the compensatory strategies that undergraduate participants…
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Concept Formation, Evaluative Thinking, Problem Solving
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Groth, Randall E.; Choi, Yoojin – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2023
Learning to interpret data in context is an important educational outcome. To assess students' attainment of this outcome, it is necessary to examine the interplay between their contextual and statistical reasoning. We describe a research method designed to do so. The method draws upon Toulmin's (1958, 2003) model of argumentation for the first…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Data Interpretation, Evaluative Thinking, Evaluation Methods
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Tony Eaude – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2023
This article explores tentatively how young children develop a sense of beauty and should be guided in doing so. Beauty is partly a matter of personal preference, but it implies a more profound and considered idea than what is pleasing or attractive. Beauty contributes to well-being and a flourishing life. Since ideas of beauty vary over time and…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Child Development, Socialization, Socioeconomic Influences
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Jang, Yoonhee – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Dual-process theories of memory assume that memory is based on recollection and familiarity. A few dual-process approaches to metacognition have been proposed, which assume that metacognitive judgments, including judgments of learning (JOLs) or predictions about the likelihood of recall, are based on two, or slow and fast, processes. Prior…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Metacognition, Cues, Recall (Psychology)
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Westera, Matthijs; Gupta, Abhijeet; Boleda, Gemma; Padó, Sebastian – Cognitive Science, 2021
Cognitive scientists have long used distributional semantic representations of categories. The predominant approach uses distributional representations of category-denoting nouns, such as "city" for the category city. We propose a novel scheme that represents categories as prototypes over representations of names of its members, such as…
Descriptors: Classification, Models, Nouns, Cognitive Processes
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Pearl Han Li; Tamar Kushnir – Developmental Science, 2025
Moral decisions often involve dilemmas: cases of conflict between competing obligations. In two studies (N = 204), we ask whether children appreciate that reasoning through dilemmas involves acknowledging that there is no single, simple solution. In Study 1, 5- to 8-year-old US children were randomly assigned to a Moral Dilemma condition, in which…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning, Moral Values, Problem Solving
Ashley J. Carey – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The public often makes judgements about schools and what happens within them, despite rarely setting foot inside of one. Prior research finds that the public relies on word-of-mouth, news media, and online resources that rate and rank schools in order to make decisions. Notably though, much of the existing literature predates the widespread usage…
Descriptors: Social Media, School Districts, Public Schools, Community Attitudes
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Ronald Barnett – Higher Education Quarterly, 2024
Are the many crises of higher education real, or are they in the eye of the beholder? They are evidently something of both: The crises to which we are characteristically alerted are manifestations in the real of the world and indicate much about our scholars' perceptions and even their values. To say this, however, invites the question: can we…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Crisis Management, Beliefs, Opinions
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Lewis Doyle; Peter R. Harris; Matthew J. Easterbrook – Social Psychology of Education: An International Journal, 2024
A growing body of research has demonstrated that teachers' judgements may be biased by the demographics and characteristics of the students they teach. However, less work has investigated the contexts in which teachers may be most vulnerable to bias. In two pre-registered experimental studies we explored whether the quality of students' work, and…
Descriptors: Teacher Attitudes, Bias, Context Effect, Cognitive Processes
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Cedomir Gladovic; Joanna Hong-Meng Tai; Kelli Nicola-Richmond; Phillip Dawson – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
To progress with their learning, students need to be able to make judgements about the quality of their own work and the work of others. This capability is known as evaluative judgement. The importance of evaluative judgement is well-established, but environments in which learners practice this capability remain unknown. This paper explores…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Self Evaluation (Individuals), Construction Management, Foreign Countries
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Elena Cano García; Andrea Jardí Ferré; Laia Lluch Molins; Ludmila Martins Gironelli – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Evaluative judgement is the ability to understand what constitutes the quality of a performance or product and to apply this understanding in the evaluation of one's own or another's task. It is, therefore, a key element in the development of learning to learn competences linked to professionalism. Experiences that explicitly encourage it in…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Peer Evaluation, Evaluative Thinking, College Students
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Nisumba Soodhani K.; Antony Prakash; Daevesh Singh; Rumana Pathan; Amit Mishra; Swati Shelar; Anand Sharma; Ramkumar Rajendran – International Association for Development of the Information Society, 2024
Monitoring one's learning activities is integral to self-regulated learning (SRL) and contributes significantly to successful learning outcomes. Judgments of learning (JOL), a crucial component of SRL, involve metacognitive assessments where individuals gauge their ability to recall learned material on future tests. While prior research…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Student Attitudes, Evaluative Thinking, Mathematics Education
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Dobbs, Christina L.; Forzani, Elena; Leider, Christine Montecillo – Reading Teacher, 2023
Effectively learning to evaluate sources, especially when conducting online research, is an essential skill for middle-grade students. This article argues that supporting students in learning to evaluate sources must involve using critical consciousness skills to do so, or the evaluation is incomplete. In the article, the authors expand the…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Online Searching, Information Literacy, Evaluative Thinking
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