52
PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION

SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK

Janet Metcalfe Columbia University

IES 2006

Page 2: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

MS 143 and the Columbia University CASL project

Thanks go to IES for sponsoring this research.

Page 3: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Thanks go especially to Lisa Son, Bridgid Finn and Nate

Kornell

Page 4: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

THE GOAL OF THIS PROJECT IS TO USE PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE

SCIENCE TO DEVELOP A PROGRAM THAT CAN BE BROADLY USED TO

HELP STUDENTS STUDY. Why do they need it?

(1)self study is vulnerable to metacognitive illusions

(2) certain effective strategies are difficult to implement on one’s own

Page 5: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

BACKGROUND

The Bronx project

Page 6: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Strict Lenient0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

ComputerSelfNone

Accuracy - Advanced English Vocabulary (English-Speaking Children)

Scoring

Accu

racy

Page 7: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Spanish-speaking children learning English vocabulary

Page 8: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Strict Lenient0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

ComputerSelfNone

Accuracy - Basic English Vocabulary (Spanish-Speaking Children)

Scoring

Accuracy

Page 9: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Even Columbia students showed substantial gains, though not as high

as the at-risk children.

Page 10: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Strict Lenient0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

1.0

ComputerSelfNone

Accuracy - Basic Spanish Vocabulary (English Speaking CU Students)

Scoring

Accuracy

Page 11: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

GOAL: TO ISOLATE COMPONENTS IN THE ORIGINAL TASK THAT ENHANCED OR HARMED LEARNING.

Generation

Errors

Feedback

Page 12: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

SELF GENERATION

Page 13: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

To our surprise, we, several times, failed to find beneficial effects of self generation.

Page 14: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

There was no difference between the control condition and either generation

condition.

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

Test 1Test 2

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

RE

CT

Page 15: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

Test 1Test 2

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

RE

CT

With Columbia students, there was also no generation effect.

Page 16: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

So, we tried again, with slight modifications.

Page 17: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Bronx SIXTH GRADE children.

NO GENERATION EFFECT

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Immediate testDelayed test

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

REC

T

Page 18: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Columbia students

NO GENERATION EFFECT.

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

Immediate testDelayed test

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

RE

CT

Page 19: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

WHY NO GENERTION EFFECT ?Our hypotheses were

1. WE GAVE THE CUE FIRST ALONE WITH A 1 SECOND PAUSE WHICH ALLOWED PEOPLE TO GENERATE EVEN IN THE READ CONDITION.

2. THE GENERATE AND READ ITEMS

WERE MIXED WITHIN LIST

Page 20: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

If we alter the conditions so people do not generate in the ‘read’ condition, we get a generation effect.

Page 21: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

GENERATE AND READ WERE NOW BETWEEN LIST, AND THE CUE AND

TARGET WERE PRESENTED TOGETHER.

Page 22: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

0

.05

.1

.15

.2

.25

Ce

ll M

ea

n f

or

Len

ien

t

Immediate Delayed

Retrieval

PassivePres

ActivePres

THIS PRODUCED A LARGE GENERATE EFFECT

Page 23: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

SIMILARLY, WITH COLUMBIA STUDENTS

LEARNING GRE WORDS

Page 24: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

Presentation Retrieval

Condition

Len

ien

t Acc

ura

cy

WE FOUND A LARGE GENERATE EFFECT

Page 25: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

PEDAGOGICAL IMPLICATIONS

SELF-GENERATION OF ANSWERS PRODUCES

LARGE LEARNING BENEFITS.

Page 26: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

IN A CLASSROOM SITUATION, WHERE ONE CAN’T HAVE EVERY STUDENT GENERATE ALL THE TIME, ONE CAN GET GENERATION BENEFITS BY DOING WHAT WE HAD DONE IN THE FIRST SET OF EXPERIMENTS:

(1)LEAVING A PAUSE BEFORE GIVING THE ANSWER

AND(2) MIXING IN QUESTIONS TO INDIVIDUAL

STUDENTS, WHO MUST THEN GENERATE THE ANSWERS THEMSELVES, FROM TIME TO TIME.

Page 27: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

ERRORS

Page 28: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

We observed no effect of whether we forced people to generate an answer (which resulted in a huge number of errors) or whether we allowed them to generate only if they felt confident in their answers (which resulted in few errors).

Page 29: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

Test 1Test 2

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

RE

CT

NO EFFFECT OF ERRORSBRONX 6TH GRADE

Page 30: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

Test 1Test 2

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

RE

CT

AGAIN, NO EFFECT OF MAKING ERRORS, COLUMBIA STUDENTS

Page 31: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Bronx SIXTH GRADE AGAINNO EFFECT OF ERRORS

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Immediate testDelayed test

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

REC

T

Page 32: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Columbia students: NO EFFECT OF ERRORS

control forced generation free generation0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

Immediate testDelayed test

CONDITION

PR

OP

OR

TIO

N C

OR

RE

CT

Page 33: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

However, it seems like committing an error should be problematic.

So we ran two more experiments directed at errors specifically.

Page 34: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

Errors No errors

Condition

Len

ien

t Acc

ura

cy

BronxChildren were either forced to generate--producing many errors or told to generate, but not to guess, producing few, in a between list design. They were given immediate feedback. Errors made no difference.

Page 35: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

0.9

Errors No errors

Condition

Len

ien

t Acc

ura

cy

Columbia

The same experiment was run with more difficult materials.

Again, there was no effect.

Page 36: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

PEDAGOGICAL IMPLICATIONS

We have no evidence to support the contention that making errors is harmful, as long as corrective feedback is given, even though we have now sought such evidence 6 times.

Page 37: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

FEEDBACK

Page 38: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

So far, I have shown results only when feedback was given.

But, we also had no feedback conditions.

Page 39: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

IN EVERY CASE, FEEDBACK HELPED.

Page 40: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Feedback No Feedback0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Forced (many errors) free (few errors)

Data from Bronx studentsPro

port

ion C

orr

ect

Page 41: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Feedback No Feedback0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

forced (many errors) free (few errors))

Data from Columbia StudentsPro

port

ion

Corr

ect

Page 42: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Feedback No Feedback0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

ForcedFree

Data from Columbia, Experiment 2Pro

port

ion

Corr

ect

Page 43: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

In all three experiments, the effects of initial feedback also

held up in the second test.

Page 44: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

In the final experiment we investigated the issue of how

important it is to give immediate, as compared to

delayed, feedback.

Page 45: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

There were five conditions:

Immediate feedback immediate test

No feedback immediate test

Immediate feedback delayed test

Delayed feedback delayed test

No feedback delayed test

Page 46: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

The experiment was run over four days. On the fourth day we

did the delayed test.

Page 47: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

0

.2

.4

.6

.8

1

Acc

ura

cy

De

l te

st/D

el

fee

db

ack

De

l te

st/I

mm

fe

ed

ba

ck

De

l te

st/N

o f

ee

db

ack

Imm

te

st/I

mm

fe

ed

ba

ck

Imm

te

st/N

o f

ee

db

ack

Page 48: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

The design of this experiment allowed us to look at the effect of

immediate versus delayed feedback, holding constant

feedback lag to test (by only using the middle sessions).

Page 49: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

delayed immediate no feedback0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

Data from Columbia Dragon Masters

Condition

Pro

port

ion C

orr

ect

Page 50: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

WE HAVE DONE A REPLICATION STUDY WITH GRADE 6 CHILDREN AT THE SCHOOL AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY AND FOUND SIGNIFICANTLY BETTER FINAL TEST PERFORMANCE WHEN FEEDBACK WAS GIVEN AT A DELAY RATHER THAN IMMEDIATELY.

Page 51: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

PEDAGOGICAL IMPLICATIONS

We DO need to give feedback, and good feedback that is very specific and that the person fully learns and understands.

BUT, we may not have to give that feedback immediately.

Page 52: PRINCIPLES OF COGNITIVE SCIENCE IN EDUCATION SELF-GENERATION, ERRORS, & FEEDBACK Janet Metcalfe Columbia University IES 2006

Conclusions(1) Having students self generate the answers rather than passively presenting the answers to them has a large effect.

(2) It makes no difference if the person makes errors in attempting to generate their answers, as long as they are given corrective feedback.

(3) Feedback matters enormously.

(4) It may not matter whether the feedback is given immediately or at a delay--indeed, delayed feedback may be better.