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Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study Habits and Learning? FIFTH ANNUAL RESEARCH CONFERENCE Institute of Education Sciences National Harbor, Maryland June 28-30, 2010

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Page 1: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions

Robert A. BjorkUniversity of California, Los Angeles

Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study Habits and Learning?

FIFTH ANNUAL RESEARCH CONFERENCE

Institute of Education SciencesNational Harbor, Maryland

June 28-30, 2010

Page 2: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Components of becoming metacognitively sophisticated as a learner

Managing (optimally) the conditions of one’s own learning Spacing, variation, generation, retrieval practice, … Organizing one’s knowledge, using technology, engaging in cooperative

learning, … Judging (accurately) whether learning/comprehension that will

support later recall/transfer has been achieved Interpreting the meaning and predictive value of objective and

subjective indices of current performance Understanding that changes from the study context to the test context

will impact access to what has been learned Avoiding “foresight bias” (Koriat & Bjork, 2005)

Giving appropriate weight to the impact of retention interval and subsequent study opportunities

Avoiding “stability bias” (Kornell & Bjork, 2009)

Page 3: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Interpreting (and misinterpreting) objective indices of performance

Learning versus performance What we can observe is performance; What we must infer is learning; …and the former is an unreliable guide to the latter.

Conditions of instruction that make performance improve rapidly often fail to support long-term retention and transfer, whereas

Conditions of instruction that appear to create difficulties for the learner, slowing the rate of apparent learning, often optimize long-term retention and transfer

Teachers and learners alike can be fooled Teachers become susceptible to choosing poorer conditions of

instruction over better conditions; … and learners to preferring those poorer conditions

Examples

Page 4: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Generation Interleaving Spacing

Examples of learners being fooled

Page 5: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Interpreting (and misinterpreting) subjective indices of performance

Perceptual fluency or familiarity The sense of ease in processing visual or auditory

information

Retrieval fluency How readily information “comes to mind”

Fluency of induction The sense of ease in noticing the commonalities

across exemplars of a category or concept

Page 6: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Perceptual fluency or familiarity

Heuristic value Misattributions and illusions

Misinterpreting the cause of perceptual fluency Misinterpreting the meaning of perceptual fluency Illusions of competence

Example: Reder (1987, 1988)

Page 7: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

(Reder, 1987, 1988)

“What is the term in golf for scoring one under par?”

Page 8: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Retrieval fluency

Heuristic value Misattributions and illusions

Interpreting performance as learning; illusions of competence

Egocentrism in instruction and social communication Incomplete/faulty models of ourselves as

learners/remembers Example: Benjamin, Bjork, & Schwartz (1998)

Page 9: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Benjamin, Bjork, & Schwartz (1998)

Phase 1: 20 (easy) general-knowledge questions E. g., “Who was the first president of the United States?” Participants asked to:

(a) hit ENTER as soon as the answer “came to mind” (latency recorded);

(b) say the answer; (c) predict the likelihood they would be able--at the end of the

experiment--to free-recall having given that answer. Phase 2: Distracting activity (spatial/map task) Phase 3: Final test

Free recall: Write down as many of the 20 answers you gave earlier as you can;

(Original questions were not shown again)

Page 10: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 11: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 12: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Interpreting fluency of induction(Kornell & Bjork, 2008)

• The ability to generalize concepts and categories through exposure to multiple exemplars.

Page 13: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

“Spacing is the friend of recall but the enemy of induction.”

-Ernst Rothkopf

Page 14: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Lewis LewisLewisLewis Lewis Lewis

Pessani StratulatSchlorffWexler Juras Mylrea

Pessani StratulatSchlorff WexlerJuras Mylrea

Hawkins HawkinsHawkinsHawkins Hawkins Hawkins

M S S M M S S M M S S M

Page 15: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

FeedbackTest

Page 16: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

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Massed Spaced

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Page 17: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Results

Actual Responses

Page 18: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

A qualification

Subjective experience is not always misleading, it is sometimes even the best basis for judgments

Example: Jacoby and Kelley (1987)

Page 19: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Jacoby & Kelley (1987)

FSCAR ?????

vs.

FSCAR SCARF

Page 20: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Jacoby, Bjork, & Kelley (1994)

“Subjective experience, like the public media, is unavoidable, serves useful functions, and is not to be fully trusted”

Page 21: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Why is performance a poor guide to learning?

Performance is heavily influenced by local conditions—cues, predictability, recency—which can serve as crutches that prop up performance, but will not be there later at the time of test

Predictions of future recall are, for example, subject to a foresight bias (Koriat & Bjork, 2005, 2006)

Page 22: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Foresight bias: an illustration

Likelihood the second word will be given as a free associate to the first? Lamp: Light Find: Seek Sell: Buy Cheese: Cheddar Citizen: Tax

Page 23: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Foresight bias: an illustration

Likelihood the second word will be given as a free associate to the first? Lamp: Light (.71) Find: Seek (.03) Sell: Buy (.56) Cheese: Cheddar (.03) Citizen: Tax (.00)

Page 24: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Foresight bias: an illustration

Likelihood the second word will be given as a free associate to the first? Lamp: Light (.71) Forward pair Find: Seek (.03) Backward pair Sell: Buy (.56) Forward pair Cheese: Cheddar (.03) Backward pair Citizen: Tax (.00) “Purely a-posteriori” pair

Page 25: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

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Page 26: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Foresight bias: Dynamics

Judgments of learning are made in the presence of information that will be absent, but solicited, on a subsequent test The targets in cue-target pairs (e.g., Cheese: cheddar); or the

answers to questions (e.g, the Capital of Australia is Canberra)

We are unable to anticipate the test situation, when the cue/question alone will trigger other associations “Cheese ___?____” will trigger other strong associates, such as

“mouse,” “bread,” “wine,” etc., which will compete with “cheddar.”

“Capital of Australia?”—will trigger Sydney, Melbourne, …

Page 27: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Finally, the impact of intervening events: Predicting one’s own forgetting and learning

We are subject to what Kornell and Bjork (2009) have labeled a stability bias: The tendency to think that a memory representation,

once formed, will remain stable

This bias leads to both Overestimating remembering (i.e., underestimating

forgetting); and Underestimating learning.

Page 28: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Predicting one’s own forgetting (Koriat, Bjork, Sheffer, & Bar, 2004)

Experiment 1 (of 9): 60 paired associates

30 related; 30 unrelated

Participants judge, pair by pair, the likelihood they will remember that pair on a later cued-recall test

Retention interval to the final test (between-subjects): Immediately after the study phase; One day; One week

Page 29: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Koriat, Bjork, Sheffer, & Bar (2004)

Page 30: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Experiment 7:Predicting one’s own learning

24 paired associates 12 related (Hill-Valley) 12 unrelated (Clemency-Idiom)

Number of study/test cycles (within-subjects): ST STST STSTST STSTSTST

During the first study trial, participants judged, pair by pair, the likelihood they would remember that pair on either the first, second, third, or fourth cued-recall test cycle

Within-subjects Response panel insured that participants predicted for the designated

test

Page 31: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 32: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
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Page 35: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Concluding comment:

People believe, in general, that forgetting happens over time and that studying

fosters learning, That is, they have a theory of forgetting and a theory of

learning but they do not appear to believe that access to a given

item in memory will be lost over a retention interval or increased by further study.

Page 36: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

The end, probably

Page 37: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Final comment, if there is time, on our subjective experience as teachers

Egocentrism in social communication

Newton (1990) as a parable of teaching;

Piaget (1962) quote

Page 38: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 39: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 40: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Piaget (1962)

“Every beginning instructor discovers sooner or later that his first lectures were incomprehensible because he was talking to himself, so to say, mindful only of his point of view. He realizes only gradually and with difficulty that it is not easy to place one’s self in the shoes of students who do not yet know about the subject matter of the course.”

Page 41: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

The end (for sure)

Page 42: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 43: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study
Page 44: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Koriat et al. (2004) conclusions

“… participants can access their knowledge about forgetting, but only when theory-based predictions are made, and then only when the notion of forgetting is accentuated —either by manipulating retention interval within individuals, or by framing recall predictions in terms of forgetting rather than remembering.”

“Once the notion of forgetting is activated, people can then take into account what they know about the specified retention interval in making their recall predictions. It is indeed quite instructive that they do not do that spontaneously—even when the specified retention interval is a year (Experiment 4c)!”

Page 45: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Koriat, Bjork, Sheffer, & Bar (2004)Predicting One's Own Forgetting: The Role of Experience-Based and Theory-Based Processes.

“We examined the hypothesis that judgments of learning (JOL), if governed by processing fluency during encoding, should be insensitive to anticipated retention interval.”

“The initial impetus … was the dual-basis view of metacognitive judgments (Brown & Siegler, 1993; Jacoby & Kelley, 1987; Kelley & Jacoby, 1996; Koriat & Levy-Sadot, 1999; Strack, 1992).”

Subjective experience: “Various mnemonic cues contribute directly to produce an immediate feeling of knowing that can serve as the basis of judgments. Thus, for example, encoding and retrieval fluency may foster a feeling of competence that can serve as [an experience-based basis for judgments of learning].”

Domain-specific knowledge retrieved from memory. “Theory-based judgments, in contrast, rely on the deliberate use of specific beliefs and information to form an educated guess about one's own knowledge. Thus, JOLs may utilize such rules as “memory performance should be better on recognition than on recall memory test.”

Page 46: Self-regulated learning: Heuristics and illusions Robert A. Bjork University of California, Los Angeles Panel on Does Knowing What You Know Improve Study

Experiment 8:Predicting one’s own learning

24 difficult (unrelated) paired associates (e.g., Clemency-Idiom) Removing item differences should decrease participants’ tendency to

base their judgments on intrinsic between-item differences Number of study/test cycles (within-subjects):

ST STST STSTST STSTSTST

Participants judge, pair by pair, the likelihood they will remember that pair on the first, second, third, or fourth cued-recall test cycle

Within-subjects Response panel insured that participants predicted for the designated

test