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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/130102


    Title: Thresholds of knowledge development in complex problem solving: a multiple-case study of advanced learners’cognitive processes.
    Authors: 江玥慧
    Chiang, Yueh-Hui Vanessa
    Bogard, Treavor
    Liu, Min
    Contributors: 資科系
    Keywords: Cognitive processes;Cognitive tools;Complex problem solving;Developing expertise;Mental models;Problem representation
    Date: 2013-06
    Issue Date: 2020-06-20 14:10:11 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: This multiple-case study examined how advanced learners solved a complex problem, focusing on how their frequency and application of cognitive processes contributed to differences in performance outcomes, and developing a mental model of a problem. Fifteen graduate students with backgrounds related to the problem context participated in the study. Data sources included direct observation of solution operations, participants’ think aloud and stimulated recalls as they solved the problem, as well as solution scores indicating how well each participant solved the problem. A grounded theory approach was used to analyze stimulated recall and think aloud data. A set of thirteen cognitive processes emerged in the coding and were tallied for each participant. Individual cases were then grouped into clusters that shared similar frequencies of prior knowledge activation, performance outcomes, and tool use behaviors. Each cluster was profiled from least to most successful with descriptive accounts of each cluster’s approach to solving the problem. A cross cluster analysis indicated how learners’ cognitive processes corresponded with problem solving operations that revealed thresholds of knowledge development and formed an integrated mental model of the problem. The findings suggested that mastering problem solving operations within each threshold enhanced the learners’ conceptual awareness of where to apply cognitive processes and increased the combinations of cognitive processes they activated at higher thresholds of knowledge development. The findings have implications for anticipating where novices need support within each threshold of knowledge development during complex problem solving.
    Relation: Educational Technology Research and Development, Vol.61, No.3, pp.465-503
    Data Type: article
    DOI link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11423-013-9295-4
    DOI: 10.1007/s11423-013-9295-4
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Computer Science ] Periodical Articles

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