TY - JOUR
T1 - Activation of inaccurate prior knowledge affects primary-school students' metacognitive judgments and calibration
AU - Van Loon, Mariëtte H.
AU - de Bruin, Anique B H
AU - van Gog, Tamara
AU - van Merriënboer, Jeroen J G
PY - 2013/4/1
Y1 - 2013/4/1
N2 - The study investigated whether activation of inaccurate prior knowledge before study contributes to primary-school children's commission errors and overconfidence in these errors when learning new concepts. Findings indicate that inaccurate prior knowledge affects children's learning and calibration. The level of children's judgments of learning for recall responses for which they would not receive credit was inappropriately high after activation of inaccurate prior knowledge. Moreover, results showed that activation of inaccurate prior knowledge was not only detrimental for monitoring judgments during learning, but also for calibration accuracy after test taking. When judging the quality of their recall responses on the posttest, children were more overconfident when they had activated inaccurate prior knowledge. Also, the children often discarded concepts from further study after activation of inaccurate prior knowledge. These results suggest that in order to improve self-regulated learning, it may be important to detect inaccuracies in children's prior knowledge.
AB - The study investigated whether activation of inaccurate prior knowledge before study contributes to primary-school children's commission errors and overconfidence in these errors when learning new concepts. Findings indicate that inaccurate prior knowledge affects children's learning and calibration. The level of children's judgments of learning for recall responses for which they would not receive credit was inappropriately high after activation of inaccurate prior knowledge. Moreover, results showed that activation of inaccurate prior knowledge was not only detrimental for monitoring judgments during learning, but also for calibration accuracy after test taking. When judging the quality of their recall responses on the posttest, children were more overconfident when they had activated inaccurate prior knowledge. Also, the children often discarded concepts from further study after activation of inaccurate prior knowledge. These results suggest that in order to improve self-regulated learning, it may be important to detect inaccuracies in children's prior knowledge.
KW - Calibration
KW - Children
KW - Judgment accuracy
KW - Overconfidence
KW - Regulation of study
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84871026056&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2012.08.005
DO - 10.1016/j.learninstruc.2012.08.005
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84871026056
SN - 0959-4752
VL - 24
SP - 15
EP - 25
JO - Learning and Instruction
JF - Learning and Instruction
IS - 1
ER -