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Maria Tulis; Markus Dresel – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2025
Background: Interest in the potential of learning from errors to benefit innovation and organizational and personal growth is currently increasing. In practice, individuals frequently do not appear to learn spontaneously from errors and setbacks without support. Based on prior work, this paper considers antecedents and consequences of adaptive…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Beliefs, Student Motivation
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Samet Okumus; Nada Vondrová; Tugrul Kar; Jarmila Robová – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2025
This study, using a scriptwriting task, examines how 52 Czech pre-service mathematics teachers (PMTs) handled a situation in which a fictional pupil's incorrect reasoning resulted in a correct answer. The participants were asked to imagine and provide a script that reflects how the situation could evolve in response to the pupil's incorrect…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Mathematics Teachers, Error Patterns, Mathematical Logic
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Solange Denervaud; David A. Tovar; Jean-François Knebel; Emeline Mullier; Yasser Alemán- Gómez; Patric Hagmann; Micah M. Murray – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2024
Error-monitoring is a crucial cognitive process that enables us to adapt to the constantly changing environment. The anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) plays a vital role in error-monitoring, and its prolonged maturation suggests that it can be influenced by experience-dependent plasticity. To explore this possibility, we collected morphometric…
Descriptors: Error Correction, Children, Montessori Schools, Traditional Schools
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Rosanna Cole – Sociological Methods & Research, 2024
The use of inter-rater reliability (IRR) methods may provide an opportunity to improve the transparency and consistency of qualitative case study data analysis in terms of the rigor of how codes and constructs have been developed from the raw data. Few articles on qualitative research methods in the literature conduct IRR assessments or neglect to…
Descriptors: Interrater Reliability, Error of Measurement, Evaluation Methods, Research Methodology
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Nakia C. Best; Ann O. Nichols; Bosny Pierre-Louis; Jessica Hernandez – Journal of School Nursing, 2024
School nurses are pivotal to the safety of school-aged children, particularly those who receive medications in the school setting. The purpose of this study was to explore factors associated with medication administration errors in North Carolina school districts between 2012/2013 and 2017/2018. A longitudinal study using repeated measures…
Descriptors: School Nurses, Public Schools, Medicine, Error Correction
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Yi-Ching Chen; Gwo-Ching Chang; Wei-Min Huang; Ing-Shiou Hwang – npj Science of Learning, 2023
This study investigated behavioral and cortical mechanisms for short-term postural training with error amplification (EA) feedback in the elderly. Thirty-six elderly subjects (65.7 ± 2.2 years) were grouped (control and EA, n = 18) for training in stabilometer balance under visual guidance. During the training session (8 training rounds of 60 s in…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Feedback (Response), Older Adults, Error Correction
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Kan, Irene P.; Pizzonia, Kendra L.; Drummey, Anna B.; Mikkelsen, Eli J. V. – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2021
Background: The term "continued influence effect" (CIE) refers to the phenomenon that discredited and obsolete information continues to affect behavior and beliefs. The practical relevance of this work is particularly apparent as we confront fake news everyday. Thus, an important question becomes, how can we mitigate the continued…
Descriptors: News Reporting, Misconceptions, Influences, Prevention
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Jussi S. Jauhiainen; Agustin Bernardo Garagorry Guerra – Journal of Information Technology Education: Innovations in Practice, 2025
Aim/Purpose: This article investigates the process of identifying and correcting hallucinations in ChatGPT-4's recall of student-written responses as well as its evaluation of these responses, and provision of feedback. Effective prompting is examined to enhance the pre-evaluation, evaluation, and post-evaluation stages. Background: Advanced Large…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Student Evaluation, Writing Evaluation, Feedback (Response)
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Ole Eggers Bjaelde; David Boud; Annika Büchert Lindberg – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2025
Many students struggle with making sense of feedback information and in applying and transferring it to new contexts. Research literature suggests that low-performing students are especially at risk because they often do not understand assessment criteria and cannot utilise information they receive. This paper addresses this problem through…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Academic Achievement, Feedback (Response), Evaluation Methods
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August Namuth; Samuel Bruton; Lisa Wright; Donald Sacco – Journal of Academic Ethics, 2024
Increasingly, scholarly journals have begun retracting published articles for reasons other than those described by advisory organizations such as the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). Numerous research articles have been retracted of late due to political concerns. Additionally, some articles have been retracted for behavioral misconduct,…
Descriptors: Writing for Publication, Journal Articles, Antisocial Behavior, Behavior Problems
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Chun Cao; Wei Chang; Haijing Dong – Educational Psychology, 2024
Perfectionism is widely recognised as a key factor in students' learning experiences, but such evidence is primarily derived from cross-sectional studies testing unidirectional links. To fill in the gap, our study used a longitudinal design and made the initial attempt to examine the bi-directional links between two types of perfectionism…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Personality Traits, Error Correction
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Scott A. Dueker; Jill D. Grande – Journal of Special Education Preparation, 2024
Mathematics is a core academic subject, regardless of grade level or setting. Everyone uses mathematics in their everyday life, so being competent in basic mathematics is critical to independent living. One thing teachers can do to ensure learners are learning the mathematics concepts being taught is to diagnose and remediate the errors they are…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Mathematics Instruction, Educational Diagnosis
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Green, Kimberly M.; Ferrell, Lantz – Journal of Instructional Pedagogies, 2023
Functions and formulas in spreadsheets provide an instructional opportunity to help students build their skills in identifying errors in their own work and identifying a path to go about correcting the errors. This paper provides examples of functions and equations used to create two approaches to calculating the solution to one problem, such as a…
Descriptors: Spreadsheets, Problem Solving, Error Patterns, Error Correction
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Tomer Gal; Arnon Hershkovitz – International Journal on E-Learning, 2023
Feedback is a powerful instructional tool. However, even after decades of thorough studies, some questions regarding feedback remain unanswered. In particular, it is yet to be determined whether feedback elaboration is indeed helpful to students. In the study presented here, we take a learning analytics approach to investigate the effect of…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Time, Success, Electronic Learning
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Janet Metcalfe; Judy Xu; Matti Vuorre; Robert Siegler; Dylan Wiliam; Robert A. Bjork – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2025
Background: Although the generation of errors has been thought, traditionally, to impair learning, recent studies indicate that, under particular feedback conditions, the commission of errors may have a beneficial effect. Aims: This study investigates the teaching strategies that facilitate learning from errors. Materials and Methods: This 2-year…
Descriptors: Error Patterns, Error Correction, Direct Instruction, Test Preparation
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