Publication | Open Access
Enhancing learning through strategy instruction and group interaction: is active generation of elaborations critical?
43
Citations
21
References
2000
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationLearning-by-doingActive GenerationPsychologyInstructional DesignLearning OrganizationNew MaterialLearning PsychologyCollaborative LearningPeer LearningSocial Learning TheoryLearning SciencesStrategy InstructionGroup InteractionSocial CognitionInstructionPerformance StudiesPeer InteractionInterpersonal CommunicationStrategic InterventionArtsCooperative LearningSelf-regulated Learning
We examined strategic intervention when learners were actively engaged in group discussion to assess the impact of peer interaction. In addition, memory performance was compared between students who generated or evaluated elaborations when using the elaborative interrogation strategy, as well as between a supported strategy where learners were provided with explanatory elaborations and a self-study condition. Introductory psychology students (N=263) in groups of 3 to 5 members studied sixty facts about familiar and unfamiliar animals. Overall, the potency of elaborative interrogation was confirmed regardless of whether students studied interactively or independently. The contribution of group members in facilitating knowledge when the group was able to share sophisticated strategic information also was highlighted. Most critically, when background knowledge was sufficient to promote connections between existing and new material, it was the active generation of elaborations that maximized learning. Copyright © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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