Robotics and STEM learning: students’ achievements in assignments according to the P3 Task Taxonomy—practice, problem solving, and projects

2016 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Moshe Barak ◽  
Muhammad Assal
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 45-48
Author(s):  
Jennifer Doherty-Restrepo

Athletic training faculty and preceptors are expected to prepare students for autonomous professional practice. Problem-based learning (PBL) is a teaching approach that may facilitate development of entry-level clinicians. Research suggests that PBL encourages self-directed learning, develops critical-thinking, problem-solving, and teamwork skills as well as promotes life-long learning behaviors. We will provide brief synopses of current research on PBL and discuss possible applications to athletic training.


2020 ◽  
Vol 48 (6) ◽  
pp. 651-697
Author(s):  
Valentina Nachtigall ◽  
Katja Serova ◽  
Nikol Rummel

AbstractThe current work builds on research demonstrating the effectiveness of Productive Failure (PF) for learning. While the effectiveness of PF has been demonstrated for STEM learning, it has not yet been investigated whether PF is also beneficial for learning in non-STEM domains. Given this need to test PF for learning in domains other than mathematics or science, and the assumption that features embodied in a PF design are domain-independent, we investigated the effect of PF on learning social science research methods. We conducted two quasi-experimental studies with 212 and 152 10th graders. Following the paradigm of typical PF studies, we implemented two conditions: PF, in which students try to solve a complex problem prior to instruction, and Direct Instruction (DI), in which students first receive instruction followed by problem solving. In PF, students usually learn from their failure. Failing to solve a complex problem is assumed to prepare students for deeper learning from subsequent instruction. In DI, students usually learn through practice. Practicing and applying a given problem-solving procedure is assumed to help students to learn from previous instruction. In contrast to several studies demonstrating beneficial effects of PF on learning mathematics and science, in the present two studies, PF students did not outperform DI students on learning social science research methods. Thus, the findings did not replicate the PF effect on learning in a non-STEM domain. The results are discussed in light of mechanisms assumed to underlie the benefits of PF.


Author(s):  
Li Chen ◽  
Nobuyuki Yoshimatsu ◽  
Yoshiko Goda ◽  
Fumiya Okubo ◽  
Yuta Taniguchi ◽  
...  

AbstractThe purpose of this study was to explore the factors that might affect learning performance and collaborative problem solving (CPS) awareness in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education. We collected and analyzed data on important factors in STEM education, including learning strategy and learning behaviors, and examined their interrelationships with learning performance and CPS awareness, respectively. Multiple data sources, including learning tests, questionnaire feedback, and learning logs, were collected and examined following a learning analytics approach. Significant positive correlations were found for the learning behavior of using markers with learning performance and CPS awareness in group discussion, while significant negative correlations were found for some factors of STEM learning strategy and learning behaviors in pre-learning with some factors of CPS awareness. The results imply the importance of an efficient approach to using learning strategies and functional tools in STEM education.


2020 ◽  
pp. 65-86
Author(s):  
Anna L. Peterson

This chapter looks at pragmatism, which conceives of a particular form of practice—problem-solving in concrete circumstances—as the core ethical task. Pragmatism has much to offer a practice-based ethics, beginning with its robust challenges to the static, idealist, and dualistic approach of dominant theories. Especially helpful is the pragmatist emphasis on open-ended, fallibilistic inquiry, which offers promising models for working around or through polarized ways of thinking about moral issues, which often prevent effective action. The chapter also highlights William James’s notion of cash value, which points to the meaning of moral ideas in real life, and John Dewey’s concept of ends-in-view, which challenges both linear models of action and the possibility of absolute, once-and-for-all goals.


Author(s):  
Jill Ehrenreich-May ◽  
Sarah M. Kennedy ◽  
Jamie A. Sherman ◽  
Emily L. Bilek ◽  
David H. Barlow

Chapter 7 of the Unified Protocols for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders in Children: Workbook (UP-C) introduces the skill of problem solving with a non-emotional example, or the “Problem Solving Game.” Child clients practice problem solving using increasingly personally-relevant scenarios, such as those with friends and family members.


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