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The effectiveness of a long-term professional development program on teachers' self-efficacy, attitudes, skills, and knowledge using a thematic learning approach /Tinnin, Richard K. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2000. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references: (p. 209-218). Available also in a digital version from Dissertation Abstracts.
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The effects of presentation pace and modality on learning a multimedia science lessonChung, Wen-hung, January 1900 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Texas at Austin, 2006. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references.
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The effects of cue diagnosticity on accuracy of judgments of text learning evidence regarding the cue utilization hypothesis and momentary accessibility /Baker, Julie Marie. January 2008 (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Kent State University, 2008. / Title from PDF t.p. (viewed Nov. 10, 2009). Advisor: John Dunlosky. Keywords: metacognition; metacomprehension; metamemory for text; cue diagnosticity; relative judgment accuracy. Includes bibliographical references (p. 95-103).
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Factors that influence priming in young childrenGonzales, Valerie Anne 02 August 2018 (has links)
An empirical exploration of factors that facilitate priming
in young children was undertaken utilizing sequentially
degraded pictures (fragpix) developed by Snodgrass and her
colleagues. The identification of fragmented pictures was
studied by 288 children across four experiments. In the
first two experiments abbreviated sets of fragpix were
generated for use with young children. Experiments 3 and 4
manipulated five attributes of the priming stimulus to
measure their effect on direct and indirect tests of memory.
Experiment 3 was a scaling study that delineated age associated
identification thresholds for fragpix. It also
examined hypotheses regarding the impact of prior exposure
and perceptual closure on indirect and direct tests of
memory. During the exposure and test condition, 3-, 4-, 5-
and 8-year olds were shown fragpix in descending degrees of
fragmentation until they correctly named the picture.
Snodgrass proposed perceptual closure as an explanatory
mechanism for identification of incomplete pictures. To
explore this hypothesis, following identification of each
fragpic, half the children were shown the completed picture.
This manipulation had no facilitative effect on
identification or recall of fragmented pictures. Two
measures of prior exposure, priming and transfer, were also
computed. Age differences were found on picture
identification, free recall, and picture recognition
measures of discrimination and response bias. A linear
trend was revealed on measures of priming for picture
identification, and for picture recognition but
not for recall.
A similar method was used for each of the first three
experiments: Fragpix were presented in their most degraded
form with pictorial information systematically added until
the picture was named. Snodgrass and Feenan (1990)
suggested that priming might be equally effective if only
single levels of fragmentation were presented. They
reported that exposing adults to moderately fragmented
pictures promoted closure and was more beneficial for later
identification, than exposure to maximally-fragmented or
nearly completed pictures. Experiment 4 tested this
"optimal level" hypothesis with 5- and 8-year olds. Scores
from Experiment 3 were used to select age-specific levels of
fragmentation that made fragpix easy, moderately easy, or
difficult to identify.
Attributes of the priming stimulus were manipulated in
Experiment 4 to examine the differential impact of varying
exposure conditions on performance and on the magnitude of
priming. Three manipulations occurred: One varied number of
stimulus changes across levels of fragmentation, a second
varied order of difficulty, and a third varied the nature of
stimulus change (random or systematic). Manipulating the
priming stimulus influenced fragpix identification and
priming, but had little definitive impact on free recall.
For both ages stimuli presented in a systematic rather
than random order facilitated picture identification and the
magnitude of priming. In addition, developmental
differences emerged among systematic orders of presentation.
Five-year-olds demonstrated optimal performance in picture
identification and measures of picture recognition when
there were multiple changes in temporal contrast, while
order of difficulty (moderate to easy to hard) was more
facilitative for 8-year-olds. A finding for a quadratic
function for 8-year-olds on picture identification and
magnitude of priming supported a moderately fragmented
stimulus being an optimal prime, while for 5-year-olds, the
relationship was monotonic. This pattern was not observed
on the direct memory tests.
It is argued that both perceptual and cognitive
components of the task influence performance in an
integrative manner on indirect and direct memory tests. A
modified form of transfer appropriate processing is proposed
as a reasonable explanation of the findings. / Graduate
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The effect of different interpolated activities on retroaction in a verbal learning experimentRoss, Dorothea M. January 1958 (has links)
The purpose of this research was to investigate a methodological problem in the area of retroactive interference. Retroactive interference was defined as a decrement in retention resulting from an activity, usually a learning activity, interpolated between an original learning activity and a later measure of retention. Specifically, the problem was whether retroactive interference would occur, and in what amounts, when non-learning activities of increasing intensity were interpolated between the original learning material and a later measure of retention. Intensity was defined in terms of rate of manipulation and degree of complexity of a motor task.
Certain relevant studies were discussed in terms of experimental variables that have been shown-to be functionally related to retroactive interference. One theoretical system, the perseveration theory, was considered briefly in connection with the intensity factor.
Following the traditional retroaction paradigm, the general procedure was as follows: there were seven groups of subjects, an experimental group and six control groups. The original learning for all subjects consisted of a paired-associate list composed of nonsense syllables as stimuli and meaningful verbal materials as responses: the interpolated activities included a paired-associate list, a rest interval, a color-naming activity, and four systematic variations of a motor task along an intensity continuum. Retention was measured in terms of the number of correct anticipations made by the subject on the first relearning trial (recall), and in terms of the number of trials required by the subject to reach the criterion on the original learning material (relearning). The amount and the direction of retroaction that occurred in each case was measured. Both the amount and the direction of retroaction differed significantly among the various groups. The bearing of these results upon the perseveration theory, and particularly upon the expectation which follows from it that retroactive interference varies with the intensity of the interpolated activity, was discussed.
It was concluded that comparisons between retroaction experiments should be made with extreme caution if the equivalence of the interpolated activities has not been empirically established.. / Arts, Faculty of / Philosophy, Department of / Graduate
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Retention of three brightness discriminations by rats following posterior cortical lesionsTryggvason , Svavar January 1972 (has links)
Rats were trained on one of three brightness discriminations. In one task, the discriminanda differed in both luminance and luminous flux. In the second task, the discriminanda differed only in terms of luminous flux. In the third task, the discriminanda differed only in terms of luminance. Following acquisition, half of the animals on each task underwent removal of the striate cortex. Retention tests indicated that a discrimination based on flux cues was relatively undisturbed following striate removal, whereas a discrimination based on luminance cues appeared to be permanently lost. Transfer discrimination tests indicated that deficits other than sensory impairments may follow striate ablation. Results are discussed in terms of sensory and attentional deficits which occur with striate removal. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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Transfer in serial learning as a function of interlist positional relationsWhitmore, Sally Jean January 1973 (has links)
Transfer in serial learning as a function of inter-list positional relations was examined in a serial to serial transfer paradigm. After learning a 16-adjective serial list to a criterion of two consecutive perfect recitations, 128 Ss, were given ten trials on a l6-adjective transfer task. There were four conditions of transfer defined by the positional relationship of Items between successive lists. First-, second-, and fourth-order derived list conditions and a control condition were used. Half of the experimental Ss were instructed as to the positional relationship between the lists while the remaining Ss were given no positional Information. The results indicated significant positive transfer in the DL₁ and DL₄ groups when compared to the control group. DL₂ performance was slightly superior to performance of the control group but this difference did not approach significance. Performance of instructed Ss was found to be significantly better than performance of non-instructed Ss. The instructions variable was not found to have a differential effect among conditions. The results were interpreted as being Incompatible with either the sequential or the ordinal-position hypothesis of serial learning, but as evidence in support of a relative ordinal-position hypothesis. / Arts, Faculty of / Psychology, Department of / Graduate
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The effects of analyzing task demands on children's selection and transfer of effective memory strategiesChow, Yi Ling Mary January 1987 (has links)
This study examined the effects of analyzing task demands on children's selection and spontaneous transfer of effective memory strategies. Two learning tasks and a transfer task were used. One hundred and eight children in grades 3 and 5 were randomly assigned to one of the three conditions, Control, Simple Instruction (SI), and Elaborated Instruction (EI). No strategy was taught to subjects in the Control condition. Subjects in the SI and EI conditions were instructed to use appropriate memory strategies for the learning task. In addition, subjects in the EI condition also received task-specific strategies information prior to the transfer task. Their application of the memory strategies to the transfer task was examined. Results indicated that the main effect of grade was significant for the categorical word-list task but not for the paired-associate task at both learning and transfer phases. In general, subjects in the two experimental conditions (SI and EI) performed better than the subjects in the Control condition, and that the EI subjects out performed the SI subjects. Transfer of the strategies occurred mainly in the EI condition which included the task-specific information. In other words, the more task-specific information subjects received concerning the memory strategies, the more likely they would transfer the strategies appropriately to new learning situations. / Education, Faculty of / Educational and Counselling Psychology, and Special Education (ECPS), Department of / Graduate
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Effects of leader style, leader consistency, and participant personality on learning and other variables in small groupRichardson, Astrid Marie. January 1986 (has links)
No description available.
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A study of transfer in bright and dull children.Shannon, Elizabeth Baillie. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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