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  1. Toward an Instructionally Oriented Theory of Example‐Based Learning.Alexander Renkl - 2014 - Cognitive Science 38 (1):1-37.
    Learning from examples is a very effective means of initial cognitive skill acquisition. There is an enormous body of research on the specifics of this learning method. This article presents an instructionally oriented theory of example-based learning that integrates theoretical assumptions and findings from three research areas: learning from worked examples, observational learning, and analogical reasoning. This theory has descriptive and prescriptive elements. The descriptive subtheory deals with (a) the relevance and effectiveness of examples, (b) phases of skill acquisition, and (...)
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  • Performance Expectancies Moderate the Effectiveness of More or Less Generative Activities Over Time.Marc-André Reinhard, Sophia Christin Weissgerber & Kristin Wenzel - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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  • No Robust Effect of Distributed Practice on the Short- and Long-Term Retention of Mathematical Procedures.Mirjam Ebersbach & Katharina Barzagar Nazari - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11:500524.
    We investigated the effect of distributed practice and more specifically the “lag effect” concerning the retention of mathematical procedures. The lag effect implies that longer retention intervals benefit from longer inter-study intervals (ISIs). University students ( N = 235) first learned how to solve permutation tasks and then practiced this procedure with an ISI of zero (i.e., massed), one, or 11 days. The final test took place after one or five weeks. All conditions were manipulated between-subjects. Contrary to our expectations, (...)
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  • Undesirable Difficulty Effects in the Learning of High-Element Interactivity Materials.Ouhao Chen, Juan C. Castro-Alonso, Fred Paas & John Sweller - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:375102.
    According to the concept of desirable difficulties, introducing difficulties in learning may sacrifice short-term performance in order to benefit long-term retention of learning. We describe three types of desirable difficulty effects: testing, generation, and varied conditions of practice. The empirical literature indicates that desirable difficulty effects are not always obtained and we suggest that cognitive load theory may be used to explain many of these contradictory results. Many failures to obtain desirable difficulty effects may occur under conditions where working memory (...)
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  • The order matters: sequencing strategies in example-based learning.Julia Murböck - 2018 - Dissertation, Ludwig Maximilians Universität, München
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