Publication Type

Journal Article

Version

acceptedVersion

Publication Date

10-2024

Abstract

How can students effectively learn and transfer mathematical procedures to solve new problems? Here, we tested the effects of deliberately committing and correcting errors during mathematical problem-solving practice on transfer of the learned procedures. In two experiments, university students were instructed on mathematical algorithms (synthetic division and matrix multiplication) and solved practice problems during open-book study. Learners were then tested on flexibly adapting the algorithms to solve novel problems that were structurally more complex or embedded in “real-life” scenarios (i.e., mathematical word problems). Deliberately committing and correcting procedural errors during problem-solving practice yielded better transfer than errorless repeated practice (Experiment 1) or studying incorrect worked examples by finding, explaining, and correcting the errors that one’s peers had made (Experiment 2). Yet, most learners failed to accurately predict or recognize the advantage of deliberate erring even after the test, instead misjudging this technique as less effective. This suggests that experiencing the benefit of deliberate erring is insufficient to dispel learners’ metacognitive illusion that generating errors is not helpful for their learning. Overall, our results point to the critical role of first-hand errors in mathematical learning. Relative to avoiding errors or even studying others’ errors and juxtaposing them with the correct solutions, guiding learners to deliberately commit and correct their own errors after instruction improves mathematical problem solving and transfer.

Keywords

Learning from errors, Incorrect worked examples, Mathematical problem solving, Procedural knowledge, Transfer of learning

Discipline

Educational Methods | Social Psychology

Research Areas

Psychology

Publication

Journal of Educational Psychology

Volume

116

Issue

7

First Page

1112

Last Page

1128

ISSN

0022-0663

Identifier

10.1037/edu0000850

Publisher

American Psychological Association

Copyright Owner and License

Authors

Additional URL

https://doi.org/10.1037/edu0000850

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