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Mark White; Matt Ronfeldt – Educational Assessment, 2024
Standardized observation systems seek to reliably measure a specific conceptualization of teaching quality, managing rater error through mechanisms such as certification, calibration, validation, and double-scoring. These mechanisms both support high quality scoring and generate the empirical evidence used to support the scoring inference (i.e.,…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Quality Control, Teacher Effectiveness, Error Patterns
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Benjamin Adu Obeng; Gideon Mensah Banson; Ebenezer Owusu; Raphael Owusu – Cogent Education, 2024
Students' competence in solving trigonometry has been in doubt but little attention has been given in the area of research. An assessment of students' answers to trigonometry problems is crucial to dealing with their conceptual challenges. This study employed a descriptive qualitative research design, with the goal of evaluating errors made by…
Descriptors: High School Students, Error Patterns, Mathematics Instruction, Trigonometry
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Sean Larsen; Steve Strand; Kristen Vroom – International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 2024
This paper reports on a two-part investigation into how students think about and use summation (sigma) notation. During an instructional design experiment, two participating students struggled with this notation, but also reasoned about it in creative ways. This motivated a follow-up study in which we administered a free-response three-item survey…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Thinking Skills, Mathematics Skills, College Mathematics
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Hannah Sawyer; Colin Bannard; Julian Pine – Language Learning, 2024
Verb-marking errors such as "she play football" and "daddy singing" are a hallmark feature of English-speaking children's speech. We investigated the proposal that these errors are input-driven errors of commission arising from the high relative frequency of subject + unmarked verb sequences in well-formed child-directed…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Verbs, Predictor Variables, Incidence
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Katherine Williams; Chenmu Xing; Kolbi Bradley; Hilary Barth; Andrea L. Patalano – Journal of Numerical Cognition, 2023
Recent work reveals a left digit effect in number line estimation such that adults' and children's estimates for three-digit numbers with different hundreds-place digits but nearly identical magnitudes are systematically different (e.g., 398 is placed too far to the left of 401 on a 0-1000 line, despite their almost indistinguishable magnitudes;…
Descriptors: Computation, Visual Aids, Feedback (Response), Undergraduate Students
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Mariana Alvidrez; Nicole Louie; Mourat Tchoshanov – Journal of Mathematics Teacher Education, 2024
This interpretive cross-case study investigates complexity in the ways teachers frame mistakes and the reasons behind their framing, challenging the assumption in the literature that productive beliefs about errors generate productive error-handling practices, while unproductive beliefs result in unproductive practices. The study draws on…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Epistemology, Error Patterns
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Ori Ossmy; Danyang Han; Patrick MacAlpine; Justine Hoch; Peter Stone; Karen E. Adolph – Developmental Science, 2024
What is the optimal penalty for errors in infant skill learning? Behavioral analyses indicate that errors are frequent but trivial as infants acquire foundational skills. In learning to walk, for example, falling is commonplace but appears to incur only a negligible penalty. Behavioral data, however, cannot reveal whether a low penalty for falling…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Robotics, Error Patterns, Infants
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Julie Y. L. Chow; Jessica C. Lee; Peter F. Lovibond – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
People often rely on the covariation between events to infer causality. However, covariation between cues and outcomes may change over time. In the associative learning literature, extinction provides a model to study updating of causal beliefs when a previously established relationship no longer holds. Prediction error theories can explain both…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Learning Processes, Foreign Countries, Attribution Theory
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Alrik Thiem; Lusine Mkrtchyan – Field Methods, 2024
Qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) is an empirical research method that has gained some popularity in the social sciences. At the same time, the literature has long been convinced that QCA is prone to committing causal fallacies when confronted with non-causal data. More specifically, beyond a certain case-to-factor ratio, the method is…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Comparative Analysis, Research Methodology, Benchmarking
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Lang Chen; Jin Liu; Julia Boram Kang; Miriam Rosenberg-Lee; Daniel A. Abrams; Vinod Menon – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Emerging research suggests that episodic memory challenges are commonly encountered by autistic individuals; however, the specific nature of these memory challenges remains elusive. Here, we address critical gaps in the literature by examining pattern separation memory, the ability to store distinct memories of similar stimuli, and its links to…
Descriptors: Memory, Children, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Interests
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Jana Spear; Maria Tulis; Markus Dresel – Educational Psychology, 2024
Adaptive action-related reactions to errors, i.e. (meta-)cognitive processes and behaviours directly aimed at overcoming an error, have been proposed to benefit learning outcomes. However, causally interpretable findings are sparse in the current literature. Addressing this research deficit, the present study aimed at investigating whether…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Error Correction, Student Reaction, Undergraduate Students
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Yildiz, Mehmet – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2021
This is the first academic paper concerned with the description of intertranslational appropriations across non-literary works and to discuss this phenomenon from a novel conceptual perspective by suggesting the term "pseudo-retranslation". "Drmrod", a misspelling of (Jeanne Ellis) Ormrod, served as the benchmark of the…
Descriptors: Turkish, Translation, Accuracy, Error Patterns
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Francesco Pupillo; Javier Ortiz-Tudela; Rasmus Bruckner; Yee Lee Shing – npj Science of Learning, 2023
Expectations can lead to prediction errors of varying degrees depending on the extent to which the information encountered in the environment conforms with prior knowledge. While there is strong evidence on the computationally specific effects of such prediction errors on learning, relatively less evidence is available regarding their effects on…
Descriptors: Prediction, Error Patterns, Memory, Cognitive Processes
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Yajing Zhang; Thi Kim Truc Huynh; Benjamin James Dyson – npj Science of Learning, 2023
We argue that the feedback traditionally used to indicate negative outcomes causes future detrimental performance because of the default goal of "win maximization." In gaming paradigms where participants intentionally performed as well ("win maximization") and as poorly ("loss maximization") as possible, we showed a…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Gamification, Goal Orientation, Success
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Riesthuis, Paul; Otgaar, Henry; De Cort, Anne; Bogaard, Glynis; Mangiulli, Ivan – Applied Cognitive Psychology, 2022
A suspect of a crime can avoid legal repercussions by creating a false alibi. We examined whether creating such a false alibi can have adverse effects on memory. To do so, participants watched a mock crime video and were either instructed to create a false alibi or to provide an honest account for what they actually saw in the video. After a 2-day…
Descriptors: Deception, Memory, Ethics, Video Equipment
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