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by catchnear4321
1174 days ago
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Though Iām interested in such studies as well, assuming they exist, I have to ask why you are interested. If not purely for knowledge, if you are aiming to prepare some educational material for others, possibly even the example provided, I would suggest you at least not worry about cognitive overhead to quote this degree. If that is what is happening, awareness of it and the desire to reduce it is far more than most educators / mentors / etc have. And that a lot is contextual. In your example, the burden of being a teenager in high school is far more cognitive overhead to the learner than if the educator is using singular or plural when describing a new concept. Again, I would be interested in such research as well, and there are applications outside of the classroom. Probably stronger ones. |
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So yea, you've caught me. I've been ruminating over an idea to make really short (1~2 mins) technical educational videos. They would explain technical concepts from my university courses that I found more challenging than they needed to be. So the majority audience would probably just be university students, but I imagine that the simpler/easier it is to understand, the more effective the material would be, especially since the videos would be so short.
> In your example, the burden of being a teenager in high school is far more cognitive overhead to the learner than if the educator is using singular or plural when describing a new concept.
I hadn't actually thought of this, but that makes a lot of sense to me. For a university student, the cognitive overhead might come predominantly from tight schedules, deadline stress, etc more than they do from any single set of subpar lectures slides.
That said, even if it's not that consequential, I'm still curious how much effect it has. I actually did end up asking ChatGPT for links to studies regarding this, and came back with 3 publications, but the titles and DOI links it provided didn't seem to match up. I couldn't find the first study by keyword either.
It gave me (DISCLAIMER: INACCURATE CITATIONS):
- Jackson, L. A., & Stanovich, K. E. (1986). Conceptual information processing and the use of singular and plural forms by children. Journal of Educational Psychology, 78(3), 205ā213. https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-0663.78.3.205
- Coxhead, A. (2000). A new academic word list. TESOL Quarterly, 34(2), 213ā238. https://doi.org/10.2307/3587953
- Hayes, J. R. (1985). Three problems in teaching general skills. Educational Psychologist, 20(1), 43ā54. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15326985ep2001_4