Difference between revisions of "Refinement and Fluency"
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=== Annotated bibliography === | === Annotated bibliography === |
Revision as of 17:13, 26 July 2007
Contents
The PSLC Refinement and Fluency cluster
Abstract
The studies in this cluster concern the design and organization of instructional activities to facilitate the acquisition, refinement, and fluent control of critical knowledge components. The research of the cluster addresses a series of core propositions, including but not limited to the following.
1. cognitive task analysis or knowledge component analysis: To design effective instruction, we must analyze learning tasks into their simplest components.
2. fluency from basics: For true fluency, higher level skills must be grounded on well-practiced lower level skills.
3. scheduling of practice: Optimized scheduling of practice uses principles of memory to maximize robust learning and achieve mastery.
4. explicit instruction: Explicit rule-based instruction facilitates the acquisition of specific skills, but only if the rules are simple.
5. implicit instruction: On the other hand, implicit instruction or exposure serves to foster the development of initial familiarity with larger patterns.
6. immediacy of feedback: A corollary of the emphasis on in vivo evaluation, scheduling, and explicit instruction is the idea that immediate feedback facilitates learning.
7. cue validity: In both explicit and implicit instruction, cue validity plays a central role in determining ease of learning of knowledge components.
8. focusing: Instruction that focuses the learner's attention on valid cues leads to more robust learning than unfocused instruction or instruction that focuses on less valid cues.
9. learning to learn: The acquisition of skills such as analysis, help-seeking, or advance organizers can promote future learning.
10. transfer: A learner's earlier knowledge places strong constraints on new learning, promoting some forms of learning, while blocking others.
The overall hypothesis is that instruction that systematically reflects the complex features of targeted knowledge in relation to the learner’s existing knowledge leads to more robust learning than instruction that does not. The principle is that the gap between targeted knowledge and existing knowledge needs to be directly reflected in the organization of instructional events. This organization includes the structure of knowledge components selected for instruction, the scheduling of learning events, practice, recall opportunities, explicit and implicit presentations, and other activities.
This hypothesis can be rephrased in terms of the PSLC general hypothesis, which is that robust learning occurs when the learning event space is designed to include appropriate target paths, and when students are encouraged to take those paths. The studies in this cluster focus on the formulation of well specified target paths with highly predictable learning outcomes.
Significance
A core theme in this cluster is that instruction in basic skills can facilitate the acquisition and refinement of knowledge and prepare the learner for fluency-enhancing practice. Instruction that provides practice and feedback for basic skills on a schedule that closely matches observed student abilities is important for this goal, and can be effectively delivered by computer. In the area of second language learning, the strengths of computerized instruction are matched by certain weaknesses. In particular, computerized tutors are not yet good at speech recognition, making it difficult to assess student production. Moreover, contact with a human teacher can increase the breadth of language usage, as well as motivation. Therefore, an optimal environment for language learning would combine the strengths of computerized instruction with those of classroom instruction. It is possible that a similar analysis will apply to science and math.
Glossary
Refinement and Fluency glossary.
Research question
The overall research question is how can instruction optimally organize the presentation of complex targeted knowledge, taking into account the learner’s existing knowledge as well as an analysis of the target domain? In examining this general question, the studies focus on the following dimensions of instructional organization, among others: the demands placed on learners of specific knowledge components, the scheduling of practice, the timing and extent of explicit instructional events relative to implicit learning opportunities, and the role of feedback.
Independent variables
At a general level, the research varies the organization of instructional events. This organization variable is typically based on alternative analyses of task demands, relevant knowledge components, and learner background.
Dependent variables
The dependent variables in these studies assess learner performance during learning events and following learning. Typical measures are percentage correct and number of learning trials or time to reach a given standard of performance. Response times are also measured in some cases.
Hypotheses
The overall hypothesis is that instruction that systematically reflects the complex features of targeted knowledge in relation to the learner’s existing knowledge leads to more robust learning than instruction that does not. A corollary of this hypothesis is that learning is increased by instructional activities that require the learner to attend to the relevant knowledge components of a learning task.
Specific hypotheses about the organization of instruction derive from task analyses of specific domain knowledge and the existing knowledge of the learner. A background assumption for most studies is that fluency is grounded in well-practiced lower level skills. A few examples of specific hypotheses are as follows:
1. scheduling of practice hypothesis: The optimal scheduling of practice uses principles of memory consolidation to maximize robust learning and achieve mastery.
2. Resonance hypothesis: The acquisition of knowledge components can be facilitated by evoking associations between divergent coding systems.
3. explicit instruction hypothesis: Explicit rule-based instruction facilitates the acquisition of specific skills, but only if the rules are simple.
4. implicit instruction hypothesis: Implicit instruction or exposure serves to foster the development of initial familiarity with larger patterns.
5. Feedback hypothesis: Instruction that provides immediate, diagnostic feedback will be superior to instruction that does not.
6. cue validity hypothesis: In both explicit and implicit instruction, cue validity plays a central role in determining ease of learning of knowledge components.
7. Focusing hypothesis: Instruction that focuses the learner's attention on valid cues will lead to more robust learning than unfocused instruction or instruction that focuses on less valid cues.
8. learning to learn hypothesis: The acquisition of skills such as analysis, help-seeking, or advance organizers can promote future learning.
9. Learner knowledge hypothesis: A learner's existing knowledge places strong constraints on new learning, promoting some forms of learning, while blocking others.
Explanation
All knowledge involves content and procedures that are specific to a domain. An analysis of the domain reveals the complexities that a learner of a given background will face and the knowledge components that are part of the overall complexity. Accordingly, the organization of instruction is critical in allowing the learner to attend to the critical valid features of knowledge components and to integrated them in authentic performance. Acquiring valid features and strengthening their associations facilitates retrieval during subsequent assessment and instruction, leading to more robust learning. Additionally, robust learning is increased by the scheduling of learning events that promotes the long-term retention of the associations.
Descendents
Explicit instruction and manipulations of attention & discrimination
- First language effects on second language grammar acquisition (Mitamura-Wylie)
- Learning the role of radicals in reading Chinese (Liu et al.)
- French dictation training (MacWhinney)
- Chinese pinyin dictation (Zhang-MacWhinney)
- Handwriting Algebra Tutor (Anthony, Yang & Koedinger)
- Lab study proof-of-concept for handwriting vs typing input for learning algebra equation-solving (completed) [Also in Coordinative Learning]
- In vivo comparison of Cognitive Tutor Algebra using handwriting vs typing input (in progress) [Also in Coordinative Learning]
- Learning a tonal language: Chinese (Wang, Perfetti, Liu)
Knowledge accessibility including background knowledge & knowledge suppression (these projects often also involve novel knowledge component and cognitive task analysis)
- Using syntactic priming to increase robust learning (De Jong, Perfetti, DeKeyser)
- Tutoring a meta-cognitive skill: Help-seeking (Roll, Aleven & McLaren) [Also in Interactive Communication]
- What is difficult about composite problems? (Kao, Roll)
- Arithmetical fluency project (Fiez)
- A word-experience model of Chinese character learning (Reichle, Perfetti, & Liu)
Active processing including learner control
- Mental rotations during vocabulary training (Tokowicz-Degani)
- Note-taking Project Page (Bauer & Koedinger) [Also in Coordinative Learning]
- Note-Taking: Restriction and Selection (completed)
- Note-Taking: Focusing On Concepts (planned)
- Note-Taking: Focusing On Quantity (planned)
Optimal scheduling & fluency pressure
- Optimizing the practice schedule (Pavlik et al.)
- French Grammatical Gender Cue Learning Through Optimized Practice (Presson-MacWhinney)
- Japanese fluency (Yoshimura-MacWhinney)
- Providing optimal support for robust learning of syntactic constructions in ESL (Levin, Frishkoff, De Jong, Pavlik)
- Fostering fluency in second language learning (De Jong, Perfetti)
- Using learning curves to optimize problem assignment (Cen & Koedinger)
- A Novel Writing System (Greene, Durisko, Ciuca, Fiez)
Annotated bibliography
Forthcoming