More accurate than assumed: Learners' metacognitive beliefs about the effectiveness of retrieval practice

被引:4
|
作者
Weissgerber, Sophia C. [1 ]
Rummer, Ralf [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kassel, Holland Str 36-38, D-34127 Kassel, Germany
关键词
Retrieval Practice; Testing effect; Test-enhanced learning; Rereading Meta-cognition; Judgments of learning; Offline-judgments of learning (offline-JOLs; off-JOLs); Online-judgments of learning (online-JOLs; onJOLs); STRATEGIES; STUDENTS; TESTS; POWER;
D O I
10.1016/j.learninstruc.2022.101679
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
We doubt the prevailing interpretation of lower Judgments of Learning (JOLs) for testing over rereading to reflect learners' favoritism of an ineffective activity. We argue that JOLs for testing are biased due to a negative feedback effect. In three preregistered experiments (N-final = 306), we eliminated the feedback effect by asking students to only imagine learning with the described activities (rereading/testing) after reading a text and by capturing offline-JOLs (off-JOLs = being decoupled from the current learning experience) as a function of an imaginary final test delay (5 min/1 week/2 weeks). In 5-min conditions, off-JOLs consistently reflected no differences between rereading and testing; in 1-week and 2-week conditions, two (of three) experiments demonstrated an advantage of testing over rereading. These results are consistent with actual learning outcomes in an experiment using the same text and activities (Rummer et al., 2017, Exp. 1). Learners' metacognitive judgments resembled actual learning outcomes more accurately than suggested by previous research.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [32] A cultural communities approach to understanding Head Start teachers' beliefs about language use with dual language learners: Implications for practice
    Garrity, Sarah
    Guerra, Alison Wishard
    CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN EARLY CHILDHOOD, 2015, 16 (03): : 241 - 256
  • [33] Do teachers use distinct motivational styles for cognitively gifted learners? The role of effectiveness beliefs, fixed mindset, and misconceptions about giftedness
    Sypre, Sabine
    Waterschoot, Joachim
    Soenens, Bart
    Verschueren, Karine
    Vansteenkiste, Maarten
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY OF EDUCATION, 2024, 39 (02) : 999 - 1025
  • [34] Do teachers use distinct motivational styles for cognitively gifted learners? The role of effectiveness beliefs, fixed mindset, and misconceptions about giftedness
    Sabine Sypré
    Joachim Waterschoot
    Bart Soenens
    Karine Verschueren
    Maarten Vansteenkiste
    European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2024, 39 : 999 - 1025
  • [35] Societal beliefs about pain may be more balanced than previously thought. Results of the Guernsey pain survey
    Martin Rabey
    Helen Slater
    Clair Hebron
    Niamh Moloney
    BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders, 25
  • [36] Societal beliefs about pain may be more balanced than previously thought. Results of the Guernsey pain survey
    Rabey, Martin
    Slater, Helen
    Hebron, Clair
    Moloney, Niamh
    BMC MUSCULOSKELETAL DISORDERS, 2024, 25 (01)
  • [37] People Endorse Harsher Policies in Principle Than in Practice: Asymmetric Beliefs About Which Errors to Prevent Versus Fix
    Rude, Eitan D.
    Shaddy, Franklin
    PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE, 2024, 35 (05) : 529 - 542
  • [38] Is a 70% Forecast More Accurate Than a 30% Forecast? How Level of a Forecast Affects Inferences About Forecasts and Forecasters
    Bagchi, Rajesh
    Ince, Elise Chandon
    JOURNAL OF MARKETING RESEARCH, 2016, 53 (01) : 31 - 45
  • [39] Is Age More Than a Number? The Role of Openness and (Non)Essentialist Beliefs About Aging for How Young or Old People Feel
    Weiss, David
    Reitz, Anne K.
    Stephan, Yannick
    PSYCHOLOGY AND AGING, 2019, 34 (05) : 729 - 737
  • [40] Clinical practice change requires more than comparative effectiveness evidence: abdominal aortic aneurysm management in the USA
    Ballard, David J.
    Filardo, Giovanni
    da Graca, Briget
    Powell, Janet T.
    JOURNAL OF COMPARATIVE EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH, 2012, 1 (01) : 31 - 44