Publication | Closed Access
Encouraging Mindful Use of Prior Knowledge: Attempting to Construct Explanatory Answers Facilitates Learning
375
Citations
50
References
1992
Year
Inquiry-based LearningTrue ExperimentsEducational PsychologyMetacognitionExplanatory AnswersEducationCognitionMindful UseConceptual Knowledge AcquisitionLearning-by-doingLanguage LearningSocial SciencesPsychologyNew MaterialJust-in-time LearningLearning ProblemPrior KnowledgeCognitive ScienceLearning SciencesExperimental PsychologyLearning TheoryEpistemologyAdaptive Learning
Abstract Four lines of evidence, proceeding from correlational outcomes to findings from true experiments, are reviewed as preliminary support for the hypothesis that learning is increased when students attempt to construct explanatory answers to questions about to-be-learned content (i.e., answers requiring inferential transformation of questioned material). The lines of evidence are as follows: (a) When students generate explanatory answers to questions as part of learning in a group, better learning occurs for students doing the explaining. (b) Manipulations that increase student generation of explanations to questions during group interaction increase learning. (e) Attempting: to predict the content of upcoming text by responding to prequestions (including explanatory justifications for predicted answers) increases learning of prequestioned content. (d) Attempting to explain the significance of to-be-learned facts increases learning of those facts. Requiring learners to construct explanatory answers about new content probably improves learning because students do not spontaneously attempt to explain to themselves the significance of to-be-learned content. We hypothesize that attempting an explanation induces the learner to relate the new material to prior knowledge. Potential directions for future research are emphasized.
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