374 Matching Annotations
  1. Oct 2020
    1. elp them to better understand how their own cultural predilections may need to change and what kind of changes are needed, and how they can adapt their approaches to learning to match the expectations of a particular learning environment

      crucial finding

    2. but in a long-term oriented culture, students may perceive the long-term goals as getting a good understanding of the subject, and hence work towards this goal

      intrinsic motivation comes with long term goals

    3. n the so called shame cultures (such as Japanese), the possible criticisms from the audience and peers are taken very seriously, and behaviour is moulded on avoidance of such criticism as far as possible. In guilt cultures, on the other hand, the actions are determined by whether they conform to a set of internal norms that may be called conscienc

      interesting difference in cultures- shame vs guilt

    4. Thus the students, even in a different culture, would be simply too shy or scared to question the teachers, come out with original answers or extend the point to unfamiliar situations. In a study, teachers from a Western society, with a low power distance

      interesting how students who don't view the teachers as powerful are able to learn more and think for themselvevs

    5. he students’ perception of what their teachers want will influence the outcome. Thus, the approaches to learning in societies with different power distances can be expected to differ

      interesting

    6. embedded in the logic of that particular culture, and hence reveal collective patterns at a macro leve

      cultural lenses

    7. while individual excellence is nourished and celebrated in individualistic cultures. In collectivistic cultures, harmony in the group is encouraged, and great emphasis is placed on group norms.

      individual vs. group mindsets

    8. ‘What is the relationship between the dominant approaches to learning of the members of a country/community and the culture of that country or community?’

      purpose pt 2

    9. n this paper, our focus is on approaches to learning and our objective is to explore the relationship between the dominant approaches to learning in different cultures and the generic attributes of the cultures

      purpose

    Annotators

    1. t peer learning may be one way to improve well-beingfor college students attending four-year institutions in the USA

      helpful in allowing students to stay in college; lets students know if they need to reach out for help during this crucial time

    2. suggesting that males may derive more benefit from peer learning inregards to developing Environmental Mastery traits

      interesting....why would this be?

    3. Results suggest that engagement in peerlearning may help students develop some of the Purpose in Life traits

      this seems very beneficial

    4. These results suggest thatpeer learning has a positive influence on students’overall psychological well-being regard-less of their sex, race, or academic ability

      doesn't depend on one variable, applies to everyone

    5. that peer learning positively influences psychological well-being hasyet to be tested with longitudinal data

      purpose/research questions

    6. This, in turn, leads tostudents who are less likely to persist in college.

      student retention is determined partly off well-being

    7. rior research suggests that forfirst-year college students well-being is associatedwith physical health, life satisfaction, and social support

      peer connections would help this at a time where it is most crucial

    8. sychologicalwell-being is defined as‘the ability to develop, maintain, and appropriately modifyinterdependent relationships with others to succeed in achieving goals

      defintinition of psychological wellbeing

    9. perceive that they can reach their goals if the other individuals with whom they arecooperatively working also reach their goals, promoting each other’s efforts to achievegoals

      group/team effort to reach goals

    10. individuals share common goals and each person’s success is affected bythe action of the other’(789), and where outcomes are influenced by individual factorsand by interactions with peers.

      theory number 1- social dependence theory

    11. These results have been shown to be consistentacross a variety of educational settings and cultural backgrounds, making peer learninga highly useful and important pedagogical method for helping students learn.

      IMPORTANT - beneficial to everyone and all types of learners

    12. one of the dominant instructional practices throughout the world

      not controversial; everyone agrees it is beneficial

    13. the acquisition of knowledge and skill through active helping and supporting amongstatus equals or matched companions

      definition of peer learning: actively working together with others

    14. ). However, some scholars have distinguished between cooperative and collaborativelearning by positing that these two approaches to peer learning lie along a continuumdefined by how highly structured each approach is–that is, cooperative learning is morehighly structured while collaborative learning is less structured

      both involve working together with other classmates

    15. The purposeof this study is to examine the association between exposure to peer learning in the under-graduate classroom and psychological well-being after four years of college, using a longi-tudinal study design.

      purpose

    Annotators

    1. facilitated the use of various student engagement techniques and also inspired instructors and students with an array of pedagogical choice

      could be good for CRP

    2. active learning spaces require more accountability for learning by students due to the few physical barriers between them and their instructors

      could be a major hinderance if not

    3. disorienting or distracting.

      too much stuff going on that distacts from the content

    4. these conditions allowed for faculty to holistically engage students in learning

      much more beneficial than just sitting in a lecture

    5. audio visual tools

      mulitmedia learning theory & engagement

    6. and for students to create and share knowledge

      many resources

    7. “erased the line” between instructors and students which encouraged interaction and led students to feel closer personal connections with their instructor and their peers,

      more casual environment = greater sense of community

    8. concepts or contents representing references to active learning and motivation, reflection, and self-monitoring of learning; attribute codes were used to identify data relating to attributes of the classroom design, and descriptive codes identified the affordances the space provided. Value codes highlighted participants’ descriptions of participants’

      what they were looking for in the data

    9. physical environment of the ALC provides affordances for learning behaviors and pedagogical practices that support student engagement in the learning process.

      i would think many teachers don't consider that the physical space is actually just as important for reasons like these

    10. An affordance refers to the perceived and actual properties of objects or environments that determine how the object or environment could be used

      resources in a classroom

    11. The purpose of this qualitative case study was to investigate how an active learning classroom (ALC) at ISU influenced student engagement

      purpose of this article

    12. The “traditional” college classroom, with a fixed, lecture-style configuration, does not match what we know about how students learn nor how students expect to learn

      isn't enagaging enough for student's brains

    Annotators

    1. with the concepts presented (Brophy, 1986). When imple-mented accurately, appropriately, and withfidelity, model-ing, OTRs, and feedback serve as ways in which teacherscan directly improve student learning and instruction,which, in turn, promotes academic, behavioral, and emo-tional success for students.

      methods teachers should implement = purpose

    2. researchers found incorporating some nega-tive feedback is also useful in curtailing inappropriatebehavior

      must be a proper balance

    3. Positive feedback has been shown toincrease complianc

      feel a sense of trust with their teacher

    4. ho naturally employ more positive feedback thantheir colleagues have more highly engaged students

      better not to criticize

    5. for students with the most challenging behavior

      a good way to discipline

    6. and a mixed method of responding (i.e., 70%choral and 30% individual OTRs) was slightly better thanonly choral responding

      lets every student be comfortable with a method they enjoy

    7. an academic question, prompt, or task presented by ateacher and eliciting active student response

      another form of engagement

    8. hink-aloudsdemonstrate the internal thought process used by the teacherand provide students with an opportunity to witness theexpert thinking that is typically hidden and thus an abstractconcept to the students

      provides reasoning to the modeling

    9. In other words, effective modelingshould have a narrowed focus and direct students’attentionto the significant aspects of the desired skills and behaviors.

      good aspects of modeling - three step

    10. The quality of teacher modeling directly affects students‘behavior and ability to apply learned concepts

      another reason we are in need of strong, passionate teachers

    11. Findings indicated that teacher modeling positively increasedstudents’on-task behavior by nearly three standard devia-tions above baseline

      students are better visual learners

    12. ncreasing students’behavioralengagement holds promise as a way to increase student learn-ing and performance

      also lessens disciplinary problems?

    13. Findings demonstrated thatteacher support is an important factor in student engagementas reported by students and teachers.

      need someone who believes in them, as seen in the panelists

    14. urthermore, students with higher levels of engagementare more likely to earn higher grades and standardized testscore

      need a stronger sense of community

    15. ideas

      this cognitive seems most beneficial in my eyes

    Annotators

  2. Sep 2020
    1. further close achievement gaps and inspire more students to persist academically, both in the short and long term.

      this would go on to help many other problems in society

    2. On the one hand, being offered fi nancial compensation for each “A” earned can provide students a reason to value learning, particularly when the student lacks any other value for the activity.

      many parents do this - is it beneficial in the long run?

    3. It is important to note that these interventions are not “magic bullets” that can work for all students in all situations

      must adapt to fit the needs of individual students

    4. students are guided through instruction on the 11 aspects of the whee

      full program to inspire motivation

    5. These feelings of belonging uncertainty can lead to students with-drawing from the academic experience and result in poorer learning and health outcomes

      lack of focus on academics

    6. identify with groups of students who are stereotyped to under-perform

      you are who you surround yourself with - they would take away your motivation to perform highly

    7. through opportunities for choice in the classroom

      empower students to have a voice

    8. ncrease students’ percep-tions of the relevance of academics to their lives

      useful to their future success

    9. low ability to underscoring the importance of effort and the notion that achievement was amenable to change.

      making a growth mindset

    10. Many of these interventions provide students with training about ascribing academic success to things that are within their control (e.g., effort) and that academic diffi culties can be overcome

      having an internal locus of control about schooling

    11. if they experience signifi cant cost preventing them from engaging in that task

      motivation has to be greater than cost

    12. human values correspond to distal factors in the model of achievement behaviors (e.g., the cultural milieu, student’s goals), whereas task values refer to perceptions of the task at hand (i.e., how valuable a task is in attaining a particular goal)

      expetency value theory definition

    13. reward

      much of school seems to be this because of grades

    14. cost refl ects the perceived negative aspects of a task

      taking time, energy,etc

    15. Thus, an academic activity can lack intrinsic value yet have high utility value

      school work isn't fun but is preparing you for future

    16. inherent enjoyment or satisfaction an individual perceives that he or she will obtain from engaging in a task

      intrinsic motivation

    17. xed

      growth vs. fixed mindset

    18. 248Moreover, effort and task diffi culty can be infl uenced directly by the student and teacher ( controllable ), whereas current ability and luck cannot ( uncontrollable )

      school tasks have both controllable and uncontrollable

    19. For example, attribution theory posits that individuals frequently attribute success and failure to perceived causes such as ability, effort, perceived task diffi culty, or luck.

      not an external force, usually something internal

    20. 1

      means and strategy belief agency or capacity belief control belief

    21. The level of specifi city corresponds to the predictive power of self-concept, with more speci-fi city in the self-concept construct and outcome yielding more powerful results

      specificity = more beneficial

    22. For instance, positive educational outcomes can enhance self-concept just as higher levels of self-concept can yield more positive outcomes

      conversal relationship

    23. By identifying the sources of expectancy and value amenable to change, we can help practitioners diagnose why students like Amanda struggle and how teachers and schools can purposefully increase student motivation.

      purpose

    24. Even though adults see these standards and associated learning activities as necessary and important to facilitate student learning, why would students be motivated to engage in these academic tasks?

      research question

    25. heightens the risk that more students will fail and leave the educational system

      need strong teachers

    Annotators

    1. connection

      importance of community

    2. The use of rubrics with clearly described criteria for evaluation can also help to shift the focus to learning

      i really enjoy when teachers do this it makes me more motivated

    3. Even so, students benefit when teachers attempt to maximize students’ opportunities to take owner-ship of their educational experience

      teachers play a large role

    4. autonomous when teachers provide an opportunity for them to express their opinions

      fully agree

    5. to attribute failure to internal, unstable, and control-lable causes (e.g., lack of effort, poor strategy use) rather than internal, stable, and uncontrollable causes (e.g., low ability)

      creates a growth mindset; not their brain's fault

    6. enhance student motivation described previously can also be beneficial to students’ emotion

      makes students perform better, therefore happier?

    7. can undermine students’ learning

      i agree that its impossible to learn if angry or upset

    8. mastery, with a focus on developing competence, and per-formance, with a focus on demonstrating competence and outperforming others

      competition driven

    9. students

      i don't think its fair to hope students only have intrinsic motivation when grades are involved; this sets up a reward

    10. task perceived as useful

      interesting that this would affect motivation

    11. Students randomly assigned to receive instruction on how the brain develops and can grow were more likely to endorse a growth mind-set and had higher academic performance

      this could be an important thing for teachers to know

    12. growth mind-set

      fixed vs. growth mindset - not open to improve vs. room to get better (more effective to be the 2nd as a learner)

    13. individual

      three factors<br> controllability locus stability

    14. observe similar models successfully demonstrate a task

      very effective

    15. Self-efficacy is future-oriented, reflecting students’ beliefs about what they will be able to do, and is specific to a task

      important in the confidence and goals of a student; many factors that play in = refer to last reading

    16. Valence and activa-tion further describe emotion

      postive vs. negative activating vs. deactivating state

    17. As such, altering educational contexts offers ample opportunity to support more adaptive forms of motivation

      true; not everything is of interest to everyone

    18. Motivation refers to the pro-cesses of both initiating and sustaining behavior

      gets you started & keeps you going on a specific task

    Annotators

    1. wo domains share skills

      basic skills benefit in every class

    2. This is likely because performance-contingent rewards and proximal goals each provideinformation to learners about their progress

      rewards are beneficial to learning

    3. Having students verbalize the strategy as they apply it

      never done this; would be interesting to see if this is truly beneficial

    4. Goal setting and self-efficacy are powerful influences on academic attainments

      need goals to work towards

    5. In fact, African Americans often maintain a sense ofoptimism even in the face of social and economic disadvantage

      interesting

    6. should not be expected whenstudents receive clear performance information about their capabilities or progress in learning.

      interesting - why is this?

    7. . Some researchers have argued that gender differences in social,personality, and academic variables may actually be a function of gender orientation—thestereotypic beliefs about gender that students hold—rather than of gender

      i agree - conform to stereotypes

    8. As they grow, children gain task experience and engage more often in peersocial comparisons, which improve the accuracy of their self-assessments

      not just based off what teachers or parents are telling you

    9. fficacious about accomplishing difficult tasks; even being provided with feedback indicatinglow performance may not decrease self-efficacy

      good to be challenged

    10. Classrooms that allowfor much social comparison tend to lower the self-efficacy of students who find theirperformances inferior to those of their peers

      lowering self esteem with comparison

    11. Students in networks tend to be similar to one another (Cairns, Cairns, &Neckerman, 1989), which enhances the likelihood of influence by modeling

      imporant to find people like you

    12. observing others fail can lead students to believe that they lack the competence to succeed

      learn from those around you

    13. Parents who steer their children toward efficaciouspeers provide further vicarious boosts in self-efficacy

      "you are who you surround yourself with"

    14. Other homes do not have these resources and adults maydevote little time to children’s education

      home life is a very large factor on everything educational

    15. can control what they learn and perform are more apt to initiate and sustain behaviors

      interesting how the brain works in these ways

    16. the consequences expected from one’s own actions

      learned that this greatly affects one's behaviors

    17. higher level

      confidence in crucial in success

    18. Self-efficacy is grounded in a larger theoretical framework known as social cognitivetheory

      many various factors influence ones person

    19. Self-efficacy refers to beliefs about one’s capabilities to learn or performbehaviors at designated levels

      good definition

    Annotators

    1. Lastly, socioeconomic status did not appear to matter in our study,

      this is interesting considering SES has been a factor in almost every other study

    2. leading less self­efficacious students to not approach their professors for mentoring support, but to consult their peers instead

      true = this is not as beneficial

    3. mentorship

      very crucial in all aspects of college

    4. show that college self­efficacy and perceptions of mentorship were most important for FTIACS’ intentions to persist past their first semester in college

      the two most important factors

    5. for both individuals participating in learning communities and individuals not participating

      this had no effect

    6. participation in learning communities

      interesting - does this make you more enagaged?

    7. )

      these factors = important

    8. Other models emphasize understanding students’ backgrounds, distinguishing among different institutional settings and character­istics (Tinto, 2006) and student engagement

      i think this is important; in learning across communities last block we talked about how a students home life can impact their ability

    Annotators

    1. have yielded different levels of interest, potentially due to socio-cultural norms

      interesting to consider this factor in affecting behavior/ability

    2. s such, spatial ability might not have been uniformly controlled for between the genders, and the recognized gender effect may, in fact, still be a spatial ability effect.

      spatial ability and gender are indeed related

    3. The study did not find a main effect for multimedia type or an interaction effect between multimedia type and gender. As a gender main effect was found after controlling for spatial ability, however, H1 was accepted

      Gender does impact spatial ability; not multimedia and gender

    4. generally favoring males

      is this an evolutionary advantage?

    5. ndividuals with higher spatial ability have an advantage when dealing with static resources

      takes more mental ability

    6. Making the temporal changes more explicit through animations can, thus, reduce the mental effort required for those inferences

      i agree w/this from personal experience

    7. To uncover the unique effects of gender or spatial ability, it is necessary to adequately address this methodological issue. The current study thus responds to this need by examining the effects of gender and multimedia type on learning outcomes while controlling for spatial ability

      main point ??

    Annotators

    1. nhanced motivation though did not enhance learning effectiveness

      i agree - some things are fun but aren't necessarily more beneficial

    2. more conversational tone

      this is super beneficial in my opinion

    3. or instance, adding chapters and headings to a presentation improved learning effectiveness

      i agree - this is super important in presenting

    4. Foundational Principles

      Important three principles

    5. 13By

      SEE THESE THREE IMPORTANT MAIN PRINCIPLES

    6. Finally, new schema can be created, or existing schema modified, and stored in long-term memory

      this paragraph = how this process works

    7. The result of minimizing both extraneous and intrinsic load would maximize resources for germane load, or processing of relevant information.

      more time to focus on the processing of new information

    8. humans develop schemaor patterns of ideas that are stored together in long-term memory as a single unit

      new information is processed into these schemas & sorted accordingly

    9. This processing would suggest associated imagery of telephones as well as associated sounds of telephones;this recalled nonverbal information would be processed by imogens. The two systems are able to create referential connections between logogen and imogen processed information.

      imogens vs logogens

    10. However, the main contributionscome from Paivio’s dual coding theory, Baddeley’s working memory model, and Sweller’s cognitive load theory

      main point about multimedia learning

    Annotators

    1. You work well under pressure, and when you do finally sit down to accomplish a task, you can sit and work for hours. In these times, you can be extremely focused and shut out the rest of the world in order to complete what’s needed.

      this sounds similiar to me

    2. You like to make checklists and feel great satisfaction when you can cross something off of your to-do list

      This is definitely true for me, but i don't rush to get things done asap

    1. Therefore, students with LDs from disad-vantaged backgrounds should receive college counseling and guidance with the application and enrollment process to decrease the likelihood of delayed college enrollment.

      having a LD and low SES are two hinderances to college - these students should receive proper resources

    2. Therefore, the error variance for parent aspirations and student experience should also correlate.

      encouraged to follow in footsteps/aspirations of their parents

    3. As expected, SES has a sig-nificantly moderate correlation with parent aspiration

      creates a neverending cycle with culture of poverty

    4. Delayed enrollment poses a significant barrier to degree attainment for these students, and is an important variable for consideration within the model

      especially for students with disabilities, taking a gap year can result in losing academic progress

    5. and that a gap year positively predicted academic motivation in college

      this is interesting; i hadn't considered how a gap year would help someone long into the future

    Annotators

    1. Eventhe most well-intentioned approaches to student guidanceand support can undermine a smooth transition for a stu-dent if not informed by collaboration with the other educa-tional setting

      this seems very difficult to do in my opinion

    2. Yet, cannot just assumethat students will“figure it out”

      crucial to get students the help they need; this is the only way to truly adapt them

    3. students’knowledge of the impacttheir disability has on learning (statement 9)

      results in the ability to best adapt

    4. dditionally, studentsmust know, understand, and advocate their learning differen-ces

      crucial in getting the most help needed

    5. structureand understanding of one’s own needs

      be willing to advocate for these things at college; everyone needs different things to help them

    6. multiple environments

      difficult to coordinate collaboration of this caliber

    7. some students still find themselves forced tochoose between expensive private testing and access to sup-ports and accommodations, all while learning how to be afirst-semester college student

      another example of SES effect on learning

    8. Effectively support-ing transition to college must align with a student’sstrengths and individualized goal

      Difficult due to the amount of anonymity college students have, especially at large schools

    9. Instead students with LD want totry collegeon theirown first, thinking they will self-disclose and use disabilitysupport resources if they find they need the

      Treated no other than the other students, despite having hinderances to their learning that makes it much harder

    10. may be left to guidance counselorsand general education professionals who can have limitedknowledge and experience with IDEIA mandated transitionprograming guideline

      Major problem - the people helping aren't equipped to do so

    11. or example,students should enter postsecondary education with anunderstanding of their learning profile, ability to explain thisprofile to others and articulate needed supports, and willing-ness to lead the process of securing accommodation

      In my experience, i've never had a school that focused on this/prepared me in this way

    12. For example, young adults with LD attendtwo-year colleges at more than double the rate, and four-year colleges at half the rate of the general population.Furthermore, while the estimated college completion rate is52% for the general population, the completion rate for stu-dents with LD is estimated at 41%

      Plays a major role in effecting ones educational experiences

    Annotators

    1. every small aspect of school is harder for 2e students, to something as simple as handwriting

    2. ASD students organize their thinking more linearly with few connections

    3. 2e students struggled with grasping the essence of the lesson; thus encoding the wrong information

    4. need novelty, relevance, intensity, emotion and sensory impit and storage to keep 2e students interested

    5. 3 interrelated brain functions - working memory, flexibility and self control

    6. executive function = very important

    7. paradox - long term memory is not passive storage; it's active and always forming

    8. cohen and squire - argue that information is filtered as declarative knowledge (knowing what) or procedural knowledge (knowing how)

    9. important - the four steps of working memory

    10. attentuated filter - threshold that filters out sensory information depending on the level

    11. all memory systems are related levels of learning

    12. behaviorism can't explain thoughts and memories because it's only observable behavior

    13. comparison to a computer - we all have minds, might not be using the same application

    14. neurodiversity - not disabled, not normal thinking

    Annotators

    1. the skills these gifted students struggle with are ones you would think would show a students intelligence - reading and writing, language, etc

    2. surprised by how many different factors go into it - seems hard to determine

    3. IMPORTANT = these 7 signs

    4. gifted characterstics can be found in certain people in certain times under certain circumstances = not always present

    5. gifted should be used for students who have these atypical characterstics

    6. schools must develop a universal system to measure giftedness

    7. this act placed emphasis on students w/ low resources or inability to speak english who may still be gifted

    8. giftedness is cluster of three traits: task comittment, above-average ability and creativity

    9. schoolhouse giftedness (test scores) vs creative processing giftedness

    10. intelligence is made up of many different skills; can't be measured by one number to determine giftedness (one side of the argument)

    11. giftedness was only measured by one number, an iq test

    12. many gifted people don't do well in classrooms; are both gifted in some areas and struggling in others

    Annotators

    1. how the author hopes this topic will be treated in the future.

      i've always learned to put a "so what"

    2. may fade.

      i definitely do

    3. Restating the question can sometimes be an effective strategy

      i think sometimes I tend to do this

    4. paper

      I usually write my introduction last to ensure I'm covering everything that was said in the paper - is this okay?

    1. first or final sentence in a paragraph. It's possible that it can appear in the middle, but that can be confusing for a reader

      interesting - i have never done this

    2. Begin writing with the part you know the most about

      i do this frequently, as well as writing only one paragraph at a time

    1. "in the social learning view...." MAIN ARGUMENT

    2. interesting how humans follow people who are better dressed/higher up looking in society