Publication | Closed Access
From Example Study to Problem Solving: Smooth Transitions Help Learning
302
Citations
17
References
2002
Year
Artificial IntelligenceEducationCognitionLearning-by-doingLanguage LearningInitial AcquisitionAbstract ResearchSocial SciencesLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentLearning ProblemHuman LearningCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesLearning AnalyticsProblem-based LearningLearning TheoryProblem SolvingAdaptive Learning
Abstract Research has shown that it is effective to combine example study and problem solving in the initial acquisition of cognitive skills. Present methods for combining these learning modes are static, however, and do not support a transition from example study in early stages of skill acquisition to later problem solving. Against this background, the authors proposed a successive integration of problem-solving elements into example study until the learners solved problems on their own (i.e., complete example increasingly more incomplete examples problem to-be-solved). The authors tested the effectiveness of such a fading procedure against the traditional method of using example-problem pairs. In a field experiment and in 2 more controlled laboratory experiments, the authors found that (a) the fading procedure fosters learning, at least when near transfer performance is considered; (b) the number of problem-solving errors during learning plays a role in mediating this effect; and (c) it is more favorable to fade out worked-out solution steps in a backward manner (omitting the last solution steps first) as compared with a forward manner (omitting the first solution steps first). Key Words: fadinglearningproblem solvingtransferworked-out examples
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1