Compensation Mechanisms when Interacting with Learning Aids
Abstract
Learning environments commonly offer aids to address learners’ lack of knowledge or skills. However, learners are not or sub-optimally using these aids when these are non-embedded or segregated (Aleven, Stahl, Schworm, Fischer, & Wallace, 2003; Clarebout& Elen, 2006). This lack of optimal usage has been related to variables as self-regulation and prior knowledge (e.g., Hill &Hannafin, 2001; Land, 2000). Given this relationshipbetween learning aid usage and prior knowledge and self-regulation, we focused in this study upon the interaction between these two learner variables and the embeddedness of learning aids (embedded – segregated). Fifty-seven university students randomly assigned to two conditions participated. Results indicate that segregating learning aids is beneficial for learners with high prior knowledge and low self-regulation skills, as well as for learners with low prior knowledge and high self-regulation skills. This result reveals the compensatory relationship between domain-specific prior knowledge and domain-general regulation skills.
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PDFDOI: https://doi.org/10.5430/wje.v1n1p119
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World Journal of Education
ISSN 1925-0746(Print) ISSN 1925-0754(Online)
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