Add new tag biofuels carbon dioxide carbon dioxide emissions carbon emissions clean energy climate change electric car electric cars electricity electric vehicle electric vehicles energy entrepreneur entrepreneurs environment ethanol Facebook fossil fuels fuel consumption global warming Google greenhouse gas emissions greenhouse gases Innovation innovators iPhone lithium money MySpace scientists Silicon Valley social networking solar solar cell solar cells solar panel solar panels solar power start-ups Startups TechCrunch Twitter weekend wind turbines

FatCloud by Netlife

Getting It Wrong: Surprising Tips on How to Learn

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

University of California, Los Angeles
Image via Wikipedia

New research makes the case for hard tests, and suggests an unusual technique that anyone can use to learn

For years, many educators have championed “errorless learning,” advising teachers (and students) to create study conditions that do not permit errors. For example, a classroom teacher might drill students repeatedly on the same multiplication problem, with very little delay between the first and second presentations of the problem, ensuring that the student gets the answer correct each time.

The idea embedded in this approach is that if students make errors, they will learn the errors and be prevented (or slowed) in learning the correct information. But research by Nate Kornell, Matthew Hays and Robert Bjork at U.C.L.A. that recently appeared in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory and Cognition reveals that this worry is misplaced. In fact, they found, learning becomes better if conditions are arranged so that students make errors.

Read more . . .

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

Link To This Post
1. Click inside the codebox
2. Right-Click then Copy
3. Paste the HTML code into your webpage
codebox
powered by Linkubaitor

Related posts:

  1. Geoengineering wars: Another scientist teases out a surprising effect of global deforestation
  2. No Elder Left Behind: Researchers Say Designers Can Help Close Tech Gap
  3. Learn the five secrets of innovation
  4. What Cleantech Should Learn from Nanotech (Before It’s too Late)
  5. A New Vision for Teaching Science

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

1 comment on “Getting It Wrong: Surprising Tips on How to Learn”

  1. [...] Getting It Wrong: Surprising Tips on How to Learn (innovationtoronto.com) [...]

Leave a comment

We use Thank Me Later.

Opt out of 'Thank You' e-mails..

Get Adobe Flash playerPlugin by wpburn.com wordpress themes

Innovation Search

Translator

English flagItalian flagKorean flagChinese (Simplified) flagChinese (Traditional) flagPortuguese flagGerman flagFrench flag
Spanish flagJapanese flagArabic flagRussian flagGreek flagDutch flagBulgarian flagCzech flag
Croatian flagDanish flagFinnish flagHindi flagPolish flagRomanian flagSwedish flagNorwegian flag
Catalan flagFilipino flagHebrew flagIndonesian flagLatvian flagLithuanian flagSerbian flagSlovak flag
Slovenian flagUkrainian flagVietnamese flagAlbanian flagEstonian flagGalician flagMaltese flagThai flag
Turkish flagHungarian flag      
By N2H

Featured Post

Robotic Audi TTS to tackle Pikes Peak at race speed – without a driver

Image via Wikipedia

The team at the Center for Automotive Research at Stanford (CARS) are aiming to send a specially-equipped robotic Audi at break-neck speed up the tight bends that lead to Pikes Peak without a driver … something that hasn’t been done before.
Pikes Peak, Colorado Springs, sits atop a 12.4-mile Rocky [...]

Categories

25 visitors online now
25 guests, 0 members
Max visitors today: 44 at 03:42 am EST
This month: 57 at 02-07-2010 02:32 pm EST
This year: 70 at 01-17-2010 12:44 pm EST
All time: 113 at 12-03-2009 10:18 pm EST
Better Tag Cloud