Drawing as a Generative Activity and Drawing as a Prognostic Activity

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenZeitschriftenaufsätzeForschungbegutachtet

Authors

  • Annett Schwamborn
  • Richard E. Mayer
  • Hubertina Thillmann
  • Claudia Leopold
  • Detlev Leutner

In this study, 9th-grade students (N = 196) with a mean age of 14.7 years read a scientific text explaining the chemical process of doing laundry with soap and water and then took 3 tests. Students who were instructed to generate drawings during learning scored higher than students who only read on subsequent tests of transfer (d = 0.91), retention (d = 0.87), and drawing (d = 2.00). For students who were instructed to generate drawings during learning, those who generated high-accuracy drawings (according to a median split) scored higher than students who generated low-accuracy drawings on subsequent tests of transfer (d = 0.99), retention (d = 0.79), and drawing ( d = 1.87); furthermore, drawing-accuracy scores during learning correlated with learning-outcome scores on transfer ( r = .57), retention ( r = .50), and drawing ( r = .82). Results suggest that drawing can serve as a generative activity and as a prognostic activity.

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ZeitschriftJournal of Educational Psychology
Jahrgang102
Ausgabenummer4
Seiten (von - bis)872-879
Anzahl der Seiten8
ISSN0022-0663
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 11.2010
Extern publiziertJa

DOI

Zuletzt angesehen

Publikationen

  1. Integration von Nachhaltigkeit in das Controlling
  2. Implementation of a balanced scorecard for hybrid business models
  3. The Managerial Relevance of Marketing Science: Properties and Genesis
  4. Demarcating transdisciplinary research in sustainability science—Five clusters of research modes based on evidence from 59 research projects
  5. Advancing understanding of natural resource governance
  6. Mechanisms of teleological change
  7. Leverage points for addressing marine and coastal pollution
  8. The global context and people at work: Special issue introduction
  9. Human-Value-Oriented Digital Social Innovation: A Multilevel Design Framework
  10. Systematic distributions of interaction strengths across tree interaction networks yield positive diversity–productivity relationships
  11. Impact of different methods of heathland management on the nutrient balance and vegetation dynamics
  12. Skill learning as a concept in life-span developmental psychology
  13. Hydrological tracers for assessing transport and dissipation processes of pesticides in a model constructed wetland system
  14. Entrepreneurial actions
  15. Managing Knowledge in Organization Studies Through Instrumentation
  16. Real fake? Appropriating mobility via Schengen visa in the context of biometric border controls
  17. Influence of Effective Two- and Three-Particle Interactions on Atomic Fine Structure in Mixed Configurations (5d +6s)N
  18. Theorising the dynamics of collaborative consumption practices
  19. How to Explain Major Policy Change Towards Sustainability? Bringing Together the Multiple Streams Framework and the Multilevel Perspective on Socio-Technical Transitions to Explore the German “Energiewende”
  20. Reading instruction in 5th grade: teachers’ perspectives on promoting self-regulated reading in language and content area teaching
  21. The Impact of Scale on Children’s Spatial Thought
  22. Urgent need for updating the slogan of global climate actions from 'tree planting' to 'restore native vegetation'
  23. Conjectural variations equilibrium in a mixed duopoly
  24. Improved mechanical properties of cast Mg alloy welds via texture weakening by differential rotation refill friction stir spot welding
  25. Global Governance and the Interplay of Coordination and Contestation
  26. Advancing Decision-Visualization Environments—Empirically informed Design Recommendations
  27. Flexible software support for mobility services