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Learning: Actively Recalling Information from Memory Beats Elaborate Study Methods
Posted February 6th, 2011 by parbuckle
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ScienceDaily (Jan. 21, 2011) — Put down those science books and work at recalling information from memory. That's the shorthand take away message of new research from Purdue University that says practicing memory retrieval boosts science learning far better than elaborate study methods. "Our view is that learning is not about studying or getting knowledge 'in memory,'" said Purdue psychology professor Jeffrey Karpicke, the lead investigator for the study that appears January 20 in the journal Science. "Learning is about retrieving. |
Using PowerPoint for Best Educational Outcomes
Posted August 16th, 2009 by ellenfinkl
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This talk explain best practices for using PowerPoint in an educational and training environment, based on the research that has been done in the field. (A list of references follows the handout.) |
Pretty woman, dumb man…
Posted October 7th, 2009 by maarten.vannest...
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Johan Karremans couldn’t remember his own address when an attractive lady asked him at the end of a conversation. This Dutch psychologist had been so busy trying to impress her that his cognitive abilities were temporary exhausted. He decided to investigate this more closely and discovered man can’t think optimally after a conversation with a woman. The prettier the woman, the stronger the effect. With women this effect did not appear. |
Give Participants Time to Talk
Posted September 21st, 2009 by DanTobin
It is a common error, and one that I made early in my career. Because bringing participants together is so costly to the company, and because it happens so infrequently, there is a natural tendency to cram as much information as possible into the available time. Meeting Support Institute at IMEX Frankfurt
Posted April 18th, 2012 by mireia.iglesias
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Meeting Support Institute would like to invite you to join and follow our program during IMEX Frankfurt. We are really looking forward to see you there! Tuesday, 22th May 2012. FRESH Dinner. Early Bird only until Monday, 21st April! MSI is organizing the successful FRESH dinner. This is the place to gather with meeting industry friends, such as meeting planners, meeting designers, technology supplier, actors, etc. |
Right-Handed and Left-Handed People Do Not See the Same Bright Side of Things
Posted February 11th, 2010 by parbuckle
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ScienceDaily (Feb. 2, 2010) — Despite the common association of "right" with life, correctness, positiveness and good things, and "left" with death, clumsiness, negativity and bad things, recent research shows that most left-handed people hold the opposite association. Thus, left-handers become an interesting case in which conceptual associations as a result of a sensory-motor experience, and conceptual associations that rely on linguistic and cultural norms, are contradictory. |
26 Tips for Designing Great Webcasts & Webinars
Posted September 3rd, 2009 by Samuel J. SmithMaking the Invisible Visible: Verbal Cues Enhance Visual Detection
Posted July 26th, 2010 by parbuckle|
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Cognitive psychologists at the University of Pennsylvania and University of California have shown that an image displayed too quickly to be seen by an observer can be detected if the participant first hears the name of the object. |
What Lectures actually achieve
Posted March 16th, 2012 by mireia.iglesias
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Lectures have limits when used for education. Lectures are a great way to share information. However they are not as effective as discussions for getting learners to think, develop attitudes or change behaviors. Why Lectures? In politics lectures are called speeches. In faith institutions lectures are called sermons. In colleges and universities lectures are called teaching. Most conferences begin with a cornerstone lecture often called a general session keynote. |
New Computers Respond to Students' Emotions, Boredom
Posted March 5th, 2012 by mireia.iglesias
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Emotion-sensing computer software that models and responds to students' cognitive and emotional states , including frustration and boredom, has been developed by University of Notre Dame Assistant Professor of Psychology Sidney D'Mello, Art Graesser from the University of Memphis and a colleague from Massachusetts Institute of Technology. D'Mello also is a concurrent assistant professor of computer science and engineering. |






















