A comparison of covert and overt retrieval practice over multiple spaced sessions
A comparison of covert and overt retrieval practice over multiple spaced sessions
Retrieval practice can be covert or overt, with only the latter requiring spoken or written responses, and both enhance long-term retention in single study-test designs. However, the benefits of covert retrieval over multiple testing cycles, like those seen in successive relearning, have not been investigated. Participant cooperation with covert retrieval requests may lessen on later cycles, particularly if learners are metacognitively unaware of the benefits of repeated retrieval. In this preregistered study, we investigate whether covert retrieval can be encouraged on all testing cycles by inducing uncertainty about the need to produce a response by varying the proportion of overt trials and whether covert retrieval trials were blocked or interleaved during retrieval practice. We also consider participants’ assessment of the accuracy of their own retrieval attempts and changes over the learning schedule in important individual differences measures of anxiety, mastery, intrinsic motivation, and attentional control. The data shed light on not only the best method of encouraging active retrieval, but also the affective and metacognitive changes that occur over a multi-session spaced retrieval practice schedule.
Pickering, Jade S
ded0c7d1-e812-415b-b255-f2ebb9750213
Higham, Philip
4093b28f-7d58-4d18-89d4-021792e418e7
Hadwin, Julie
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Potts, Rosalind
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Murayama, Kou
3f3711a9-09f7-471b-af3a-78f06882765d
2021
Pickering, Jade S
ded0c7d1-e812-415b-b255-f2ebb9750213
Higham, Philip
4093b28f-7d58-4d18-89d4-021792e418e7
Hadwin, Julie
0ab688a3-59da-4ae4-b302-84884c34a9f3
Potts, Rosalind
16d3278b-3245-4210-b08d-3551a0beaeeb
Murayama, Kou
3f3711a9-09f7-471b-af3a-78f06882765d
Pickering, Jade S, Higham, Philip, Hadwin, Julie, Potts, Rosalind and Murayama, Kou
(2021)
A comparison of covert and overt retrieval practice over multiple spaced sessions.
62nd Annual Meeting of the Psychotic Society.
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Conference or Workshop Item
(Other)
Abstract
Retrieval practice can be covert or overt, with only the latter requiring spoken or written responses, and both enhance long-term retention in single study-test designs. However, the benefits of covert retrieval over multiple testing cycles, like those seen in successive relearning, have not been investigated. Participant cooperation with covert retrieval requests may lessen on later cycles, particularly if learners are metacognitively unaware of the benefits of repeated retrieval. In this preregistered study, we investigate whether covert retrieval can be encouraged on all testing cycles by inducing uncertainty about the need to produce a response by varying the proportion of overt trials and whether covert retrieval trials were blocked or interleaved during retrieval practice. We also consider participants’ assessment of the accuracy of their own retrieval attempts and changes over the learning schedule in important individual differences measures of anxiety, mastery, intrinsic motivation, and attentional control. The data shed light on not only the best method of encouraging active retrieval, but also the affective and metacognitive changes that occur over a multi-session spaced retrieval practice schedule.
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Published date: 2021
Venue - Dates:
62nd Annual Meeting of the Psychotic Society, 2021-11-04
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 467646
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/467646
PURE UUID: 279371c0-c2e0-4b3c-8038-1cc5ba991018
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Date deposited: 18 Jul 2022 17:55
Last modified: 27 Feb 2024 02:39
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Contributors
Author:
Jade S Pickering
Author:
Julie Hadwin
Author:
Rosalind Potts
Author:
Kou Murayama
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