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Corr, Catherine; Love, Hailey; Snodgrass, Melinda R.; Kern, Justin L.; Chudzik, Mia – Teacher Education and Special Education, 2023
Doctoral education is the primary time in which scholars learn about research methodologies and begin to develop their own research agendas and skills. Yet, to date, few research studies have examined graduate students' perceived value of, and access to, training in multiple research methodologies. The purpose of this study was to explore special…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Special Education, Doctoral Students, Research Universities
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Luo, Jiahui; Chan, Cecilia K. Y. – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2023
Learning to make informed evaluative judgement of holistic competencies prepares students for well-rounded development on a lifelong and self-directed basis. However, a review of the literature reveals that empirical studies framed under evaluative judgement have not yet explicitly acknowledged the judgement of these competencies. If we are to…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Value Judgment, Holistic Approach, Competence
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Pann, James M.; DiLuzio, Elizabeth; Coghlan, Anne T.; Hughes, Scott D. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2023
This article explores the utility of mindfulness in the field of evaluation. Mindfulness is a translation of the ancient Indian word, "Sati," which means awareness, attention, and remembering. While definitions vary, a practical definition of mindfulness is present-moment awareness in an open and nonjudgmental manner. Mindfulness-based…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Educational Practices, Metacognition, Evaluators
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Louise Badham – Oxford Review of Education, 2025
Different sources of assessment evidence are reviewed during International Baccalaureate (IB) grade awarding to convert marks into grades and ensure fair results for students. Qualitative and quantitative evidence are analysed to determine grade boundaries, with statistical evidence weighed against examiner judgement and teachers' feedback on…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement Programs, Grading, Interrater Reliability, Evaluative Thinking
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McIntyre, Morgan E.; Rangelov, Dragan; Mattingley, Jason B. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2022
Integrating evidence from multiple sources to guide decisions is something humans do on a daily basis. Existing research suggests that not all sources of information are weighted equally in decision-making tasks, and that observers are subject to biases in the face of internal and external noise. Here we describe two experiments that measured…
Descriptors: Visual Stimuli, Decision Making, Bias, Time
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Pomè, Antonella; Caponi, Camilla; Burr, David Charles – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022
Individuals with autism spectrum disorder are thought to have a more local than global perceptual style. We used a novel paradigm to investigate how grouping-induced response biases in numerosity judgments depend on autistic-like personality traits in neurotypical adults. Participants judged the numerosity of clouds of dot-pairs connected by thin…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Bias
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Sara Pereira; Pedro Moura – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2022
The assessment of media literacy is a complex task, which might attempt to reconcile a research field traditionally developed within a critical paradigm with the task of evaluating and quantifying media literacy competences through essentially quantitative methods. Despite the lack of consensus regarding how to evaluate and measure media literacy,…
Descriptors: Media Literacy, Competence, Adolescents, Secondary School Students
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Jamie Amemiya; Gail D. Heyman; Caren M. Walker – Cognitive Science, 2024
How do people come to opposite causal judgments about societal problems, such as whether a public health policy reduced COVID-19 cases? The current research tests an understudied cognitive mechanism in which people may agree about what "actually" happened (e.g., that a public health policy was implemented and COVID-19 cases declined),…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Evaluative Thinking, Logical Thinking, Social Problems
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Margaret Bearman; Joanna Tai; Phillip Dawson; David Boud; Rola Ajjawi – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 2024
Generative artificial intelligence (AI) has rapidly increased capacity for producing textual, visual and auditory outputs, yet there are ongoing concerns regarding the quality of those outputs. There is an urgent need to develop students' evaluative judgement - the capability to judge the quality of work of self and others - in recognition of this…
Descriptors: Evaluative Thinking, Skill Development, Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education
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Deon T. Benton; David Kamper; Rebecca M. Beaton; David M. Sobel – Developmental Science, 2024
Causal reasoning is a fundamental cognitive ability that enables individuals to learn about the complex interactions in the world around them. However, the mechanisms that underpin causal reasoning are not well understood. For example, it remains unresolved whether children's causal inferences are best explained by Bayesian inference or…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Thinking Skills, Associative Learning, Abstract Reasoning
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Lynsey Melhuish; George Ryan – Journal of Adventure Education and Outdoor Learning, 2024
This article considers the epistemological chain in adventure sports coaching through personal experiences of undergraduate adventure students using semi-structured interviews and qualitative thematic analysis. Findings showed many observable practices utilised by adventure sport coaches were epistemologically sophisticated. This included…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Epistemology, Adventure Education
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Reyna, Valerie F.; Brainerd, Charles J.; Chen, Ziyi; Bookbinder, Sarah H. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2021
Contemporary theories of decision-making are compared with respect to their predictions about the judgments that are hypothesized to underlie risky choice framing effects. Specifically, we compare predictions of psychophysical models, such as prospect theory, to the cognitive representational approach of fuzzy-trace theory in which the presence or…
Descriptors: Risk, Evaluative Thinking, Decision Making, Context Effect
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Bogaard, Glynis; Meijer, Ewout H.; Van der Plas, Irina – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2020
The present experiment investigated to what extent providing participants with a model statement influences the ability of the verifiability approach to detect deception. Participants gave a true and false statement about a negative autobiographical event, with half of the participants receiving a detailed model statement just before giving their…
Descriptors: Deception, Identification, Cues, Accuracy
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Ping-Lin Chuang – Language Testing, 2025
This experimental study explores how source use features impact raters' judgment of argumentation in a second language (L2) integrated writing test. One hundred four experienced and novice raters were recruited to complete a rating task that simulated the scoring assignment of a local English Placement Test (EPT). Sixty written responses were…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Evaluators, Information Sources, Primary Sources
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Billman, Jennifer A.H. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2023
For over 30 years, calls have been issued for the western evaluation field to address implicit bias in its theory and practice. Although many in the field encourage evaluators to be culturally competent, ontological competence remains unaddressed. Grounded in an institutionalized distrust of non-western perspectives of reality and knowledge…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Indigenous Knowledge, Phenomenology
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