• Title/Summary/Keyword: cognitive learning

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The Relationship between Creative Problem Solving in Science and Cognitive Strategies in Elementary School Students (초등학교 아동의 과학 창의적 문제 해결과 인지 전략과의 관계)

  • Lee, Hye-Joo
    • Journal of Korean Elementary Science Education
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    • v.26 no.3
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    • pp.286-294
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    • 2007
  • This study investigated the relationship between elementary school students' creative problem solving skills in terms of science and cognitive strategies. Creative problem solving in science was measured by 4 variables; appropriateness, scientific ability, concreteness, and originality. Cognitive strategies were measured by 6 variables; surface(rehearsal), deep(elaboration and organization), and metacognitive strategies(planning, monitoring, and regulating). The KEDI Creative Problems Solving Test in Science(Cho et al., 1997) and the Motivated Strategies for Learning Questionnaire(Pintrich & DeGroot, 1990) were administered to 72 subjects. Data were analyzed by means of Pearson's correlation and multiple regression analysis. Our findings indicated a positive correlation between creative problem solving in science and cognitive strategies. The surface cognitive strategy (rehearsal) positively predicted the total score, the scientific ability's score, the concrete score, and the original score of creative problem solving in science. The deep cognitive strategy(organization) positively predicted the appropriate score and the metacognitive strategy(planning) positively predicted the original score of scientific creative problem solving skills.

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The Relationships among High School Students' Conceptual Understanding of Molecular Structure and Cognitive Variables (분자 구조에 대한 고등학생들의 개념 이해도와 인지 변인의 관계)

  • Noh, Tae-Hee;Seo, In-Ho;Cha, Jeong-Ho;Kim, Chang-Min;Kang, Suk-Jin
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.21 no.3
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    • pp.497-505
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    • 2001
  • In this study, the relationships among students' conceptual understanding of molecular structure and cognitive variables were investigated for 165 high school students. After they had learned 'High School Chemistry II' for two semesters, the tests of conception concerning molecular structure, spatial visualization ability, logical thinking ability, mental capacity, and learning approach were administered. The results indicated that students' conceptual understanding of molecular structure was not sound, and several misconceptions were found. The scores of the conception test were significantly correlated with all the cognitive variables studied. Multiple regression analyses were conducted to examine the predictive influences of students' cognitive variables on their conceptual understanding. Meaningful learning approach was the most significant predictor and were followed by logical thinking ability, rote learning approach, and mental capacity. However, spatial visualization ability did not have the predictive power.

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Comparison Engineering Students' Beliefs with Professors' Expectations about the Cognitive Beliefs and the Motivational Beliefs in Learning Physics (물리학습에서의 인지적 신념과 동기 신념에 대한 공과대학 학생의 인식과 교수자의 기대 비교)

  • Kang, Eugene;Kim, Jina
    • Journal of Engineering Education Research
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    • v.16 no.2
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    • pp.50-57
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    • 2013
  • The study to improve engineering students' performance in studying physics lacked despite of the importance of studying physics in engineering education. The cognitive belief and the motivational belief in studying physics had a strong effect on studying physics. The purpose of this study was to seek the educational way through comparing professors' expectations with students' beliefs about the cognitive belief and the motivational belief in studying physics. The cognitive belief in studying physics was considered as variables like 'knowledge', 'learning' and 'relation'. The motivational belief in studying physics was considered as variables like 'expectancy' and 'value'. It was the 'expectancy' that was the most different dimension between professors' expectations and students' beliefs. It means that students have little confidence in their abilities to study physics, though professors expect their students to be confident. Professor who teaches physics to engineering students recognize these differences, need to have interest in affective domains of beliefs to teach. In addition, there is need to teaching and learning strategies that can lead engineering students' beliefs about ability to perform the task, the purpose, importance, interesting for physics.

The Effects of Fatigue on Cognitive Performance in Police Officers and Staff During a Forward Rotating Shift Pattern

  • Taylor, Yvonne;Merat, Natasha;Jamson, Samantha
    • Safety and Health at Work
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    • v.10 no.1
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    • pp.67-74
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    • 2019
  • Background: Few studies have examined the effects of a forward rotating shift pattern on police employee performance and well-being. This study sought to compare sleep duration, cognitive performance, and vigilance at the start and end of each shift within a three-shift, forward rotating shift pattern, common in United Kingdom police forces. Methods: Twenty-three police employee participants were recruited from North Yorkshire Police (mean age, 43 years). The participants were all working the same, 10-day, forward rotating shift pattern. No other exclusion criteria were stipulated. Sleep data were gathered using both actigraphy and self-reported methods; cognitive performance and vigilance were assessed using a customized test battery, comprising five tests: motor praxis task, visual object learning task, NBACK, digital symbol substitution task, and psychomotor vigilance test. Statistical comparisons were conducted, taking into account the shift type, shift number, and the start and end of each shift worked. Results: Sleep duration was found to be significantly reduced after night shifts. Results showed a significant main effect of shift type in the visual object learning task and NBACK task and also a significant main effect of start/end in the digital symbol substitution task, along with a number of significant interactions. Conclusion: The results of the tests indicated that learning and practice effects may have an effect on results of some of the tests. However, it is also possible that due to the fast rotating nature of the shift pattern, participants did not adjust to any particular shift; hence, their performance in the cognitive and vigilance tests did not suffer significantly as a result of this particular shift pattern.

The Effects of Learning Strategies on Academic Achievement in College Students :Focusing on the Mediating Effect of Grit (대학생의 학습전략이 학업성취도에 미치는 영향 :그릿의 매개효과를 중심으로)

  • Tae Hee Jang;Ju Hyeon Hwang;Jung Hee Park;Woo Sok Han
    • The Journal of the Convergence on Culture Technology
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    • v.9 no.6
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    • pp.509-517
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    • 2023
  • The purpose of this study was to examine the mediating effect of grit on the relationship between cognitive strategies, metacognitive strategies, and resource management strategies, which are subdomains of learning strategies, and academic achievement among university students, and to provide basic data for improving academic achievement. Data were collected using a structured questionnaire from 203 undergraduate students at a university in City C. Academic achievement was positively correlated and statistically significant with cognitive strategies, metacognitive strategies, resource management strategies, and grit, which are subdomains of learning strategies.Grit had a partial mediating effect on the effects of cognitive strategies (Z=4.372, p<.001), metacognitive strategies (Z=5.398, p<.001), and resource management strategies (Z=4.991, p<.001) on academic achievement. Therefore, it is necessary to specifically explore and utilize ways to improve cognitive strategies, metacognitive strategies, resource management strategies, and grit in college students to contribute to the improvement of college students' major competencies.

Analysis of Cognitive Learning Objectives in the 2007 Home Economics High School Textbooks and Achievement Standards by the Anderson's 'Revision of Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives' (Anderson이 개정한 'Bloom의 신교육목표 분류체계'에 의한 2007 개정 고등학교 기술.가정 교과서에 제시된 인지적 학급목표 및 성취기준 분석)

  • Lee, Gyeong-Suk;Yoo, Tae-Myung
    • Journal of Korean Home Economics Education Association
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    • v.23 no.3
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    • pp.53-68
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    • 2011
  • This study analyzed the learning objectives in the 2007 revised 10th grade Home Economics textbooks of 6 different publishing companies and the achievement standards developed by Ministry of Education, Science and Technology(2009). Two experienced coders performed initial analysis based on the 'revision of Bloom's taxonomy of educational objectives' and had subsequent conferences to reach an agreement on different results between coders. For knowledge dimension, the results show that the major types of learning objectives in the "Future Family Life" unit are mainly consisted of factual knowledge and procedural knowledge, where as those of "Family Life Culture" unit are consisted of factual knowledge and conceptual knowledge. The achievement standards in both "Future Family Life" and "Family Life Culture" units are solely in a factual knowledge major type. The sub-type of knowledge dimension of both learning objectives and achievement standards fall into 'a specific facts and knowledge component'. For cognitive process dimension, the results show that the leaning objectives are focused on 'understand' and 'analyze'. Those of achievement standards are 'analyse' in the "Future Family Life" unit and 'understand' in the "Family Life Culture" units. From the result of this study, we can conclude that both learning objectives and achievement standards do not adapt any meta-cognitive knowledge, higher order thinking, and cognitive process.

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< Modeling Study for Developing Motivational and Cognitive Adaptive Agent >

  • Lee, Woo-Gul;Lee, Myung-Jin;Lim, Ka-Ram;Han, Cheon-Woo;So, Yeon-Hee;Hwang, Su-Young;Ryu, Ki-Gon;Yun, Sung-Hyun;Choi, Dong-Seong;Kim, Sung-Il
    • 한국HCI학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 2006.02a
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    • pp.918-925
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    • 2006
  • Recent development of teachable agent provides learners with active roles as knowledge constructors and focuses on the individualization. The aim of this adaptive agent is not only to maximize the learner's cognitive functions but also to enhance the interests and motivation to learn. In order to establish the relationships among user characteristics and response patterns and to extract the algorithm among variables, we measured the individual characteristics and analyzed logs of the teachable agent named KORI (KORea university Intelligent agent) through the student modeling. A correlation analysis was conducted to identify the relationships among individual characteristics, user responses, and learning outcomes. Among hundreds of possible relationships between numerous variables in three dimensions, nine key user responses were extracted, which were highly correlated with either individual characteristics and learning outcomes. The results suggest that certain type of learner responses or the combination of the responses would be useful indices to predict the learners' individual characteristics and ongoing learning outcome. This study proposed a new type of dynamic assessment for individual differences and ongoing cognitive/motivational learning outcomes through the computation of responses without measuring them directly. The construction of individualized student model based on the ongoing response pattern of the user that are highly correlated with the individual differences and learning outcome may be the useful methodology to understand the learner's dynamic change during learning.

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The Differences of Executive Function according to Type of Early English Learning Experience of 5-years old (조기영어학습 경험의 유형에 따른 만 5세 유아의 실행기능의 차이)

  • Kim, Rae-Eun
    • Journal of Convergence for Information Technology
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    • v.9 no.10
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    • pp.133-143
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    • 2019
  • The purpose of this paper was to analyze the differences in executive function according to type of early English learning experience. The subjects were 75 5-years-old who had immersive early English learning in language school, and daycare center. The measurement tools were stroop, DCCST, memorize numbers, pattern fluency, and maze. We conducted covariance analysis with total intelligence as the covariates. In the results, there were significant differences in attention control and cognitive flexibility, but weren't significant differences in information processing and goal setting according to type of early English learning experience. This study suggests that experience of immersive early English learning positively affected attention control and cognitive flexibility, and didn't affect information processing and goal setting.

Implications of Using Physical and Virtual Tools in Learning Science Concepts from a Literature Review (문헌고찰을 통한 물리적 도구와 가상도구의 사용이 과학 개념학습에 미치는 시사점)

  • Seokmin Kang;Sungyeun Kim
    • Journal of Science Education
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    • v.47 no.2
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    • pp.154-166
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    • 2023
  • It has been known that the tool characteristics embedded in physical tools and virtual tools act with different underlying mechanisms in a user's knowledge acquisition and conceptual understanding. This overview study examines the learning process through the use of physical and virtual tools from the perspective of conceptual frameworks, affordability that tools present, and the depth of cognitive engagement that occurs in the process of learning concepts through various learning activities. Based on the conceptual frameworks, the results of previous comparative studies were reinterpreted. It was found that what mattered for learning is the amount of new information that a tool provides and the different level of cognitive engagement that students use through various learning activities. Finally, the implications to be considered when teachers use physical and virtual tools to help students better understand various concepts are discussed.