When Does Practice Testing Promote Transfer on Deductive Reasoning Tasks?

Publication date: Available online 11 April 2018Source: Journal of Applied Research in Memory and CognitionAuthor(s): Kathryn T. Wissman, Amanda Zamary, Katherine A. RawsonTran et al. (2015) evaluated whether engaging in practice testing versus restudy promotes transfer and concluded that testing does not enhance performance on a deductive reasoning task. The current research further evaluated Tran et al. (2015) and an alternative explanation for the observed effect—namely, that testing did not enhance memory for the information required to complete the deductive reasoning task. Learners studied premises from four scenarios and engaged in testing or restudy during practice. Following practice, learners completed a multiple-choice test that required them to deductively reason from premises. Results replicate Tran et al. (2015) by demonstrating that fill-in-the-blank testing does not promote transfer on a deductive reasoning task. Results also provide evidence suggesting that deductive reasoning depends on complete memory for requisite pieces of information and that testing effects on deductive reasoning are more likely to obtain under conditions that yield a memory advantage for testing versus restudy.
Source: Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition - Category: Neuroscience Source Type: research
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