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Delayed and Immediate Feedback in the Classroom: The Results Aren’t What Students Think!
Delayed and Immediate Feedback in the Classroom: The Results Aren’t What Students Think!
Megan Sumeracki summarizes research on delayed and immediate feedback on homework assignments. The "immediate" condition here means "immediately after the due date" rather than "immediately after completing the work." Students who received delayed feedback did about 1 grade level better on the exams. However, they felt that the delay either didn't help them or hurt their learning. Student perception of what helped them most didn't align with what actually worked.
Logically if we think about feedback as correcting errors, then it makes sense that we would want pretty immediate feedback. But if we think about feedback as another presentation of the information, then a space ought to improve learning.
·learningscientists.org·
Delayed and Immediate Feedback in the Classroom: The Results Aren’t What Students Think!
Book — The Learning Scientists
Book — The Learning Scientists
Quick summaries of key points from each chapter in a book on learning science and effective strategies (spacing, elaboration, concrete examples, visuals, and retrieval practice). I wish the graphics were easier to read though. Medium blue italicized serif text on a lighter blue background isn't enough contrast. I don't think low contrast counts as desirable difficulty, just bad accessibility.
·learningscientists.org·
Book — The Learning Scientists
GUEST POST: The Emerging Consensus — The Learning Scientists
GUEST POST: The Emerging Consensus — The Learning Scientists
This is an interesting summary of research, compiling conclusions from multiple types of research. While I'm skeptical of most claims about neuroscience research directly informing learning design, this tries to avoid that. Neuroscience research is used to explain results from cognitive psychology research. They also try to connect cognitive research on the other side with classroom experience.
·learningscientists.org·
GUEST POST: The Emerging Consensus — The Learning Scientists