reviewPerspectives on Psychological ScienceMar 1, 2015Closed access

Learning Versus Performance

University of California, Los Angeles

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

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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602
total citations
FWCI
37.81
Percentile
100%
References
207
Citations per year

Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Converse
  • Cognitive psychology
  • Psychology
  • Metacognition
  • Motor learning
  • Term (time)
  • Comprehension
  • Process (computing)
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Quality Education
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