Abstract
The primary goal of instruction should be to facilitate long-term learning-that is, to create relatively permanent changes in comprehension, understanding, and skills of the types that will support long-term retention and transfer. During the instruction or training process, however, what we can observe and measure is performance, which is often an unreliable index of whether the relatively long-term changes that constitute learning have taken place. The time-honored distinction between learning and performance dates back decades, spurred by early animal and motor-skills research that revealed that learning can occur even when no discernible changes in performance are observed. More recently, the converse has…
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Authors
2Topics & keywords
Topics
Keywords
- Converse
- Cognitive psychology
- Psychology
- Metacognition
- Motor learning
- Term (time)
- Comprehension
- Process (computing)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
- Quality Education
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