Newsletter Having trouble delivering effective feedback? Consider the motivations and emotions affecting how your feedback is received.
Newsletter What's the proper role for AI in systematic review research? AI can help researchers with the mechanics of doing a systematic review, but golly - it shouldn't do the review for them!
Newsletter Teacher training in metacognitive strategy instruction leads to reading comprehension gains Making the argument for even more integration of the science of learning into educator training
Newsletter Racial Feedback Bias, Racial Anxiety, and How Well-Meaning Doesn't Mean Beneficial Kent Harber's Model of Threat-Infused Intergroup Feedback has important implications for truly addressing racial bias.
Newsletter Should we be teaching growth mindsets or not? Veronica Yan and Brendan Schuetze have a terrific take on this question, modeling the way scholarly discourse should happen.
Newsletter Social and natural sciences are importantly different. Ignoring that is dangerous. Jason Blakely's article on scientism and its consequences is worth a careful read.
Newsletter Does a "liberal arts" education promote complex cognition reasoning? A new study suggests yes, there is value in the "liberal arts" aspects of college.
Newsletter The Marshmallow Test as a Test of Psychology Knowledge Describing the marshmallow test as a test of self-control is a good sign a person doesn't know much about psychology.
Newsletter What is "normal" reading? A recent paper questions what we lose when we assume there's a thing called "normal" reading.
Newsletter Here. We. Go. The debate about growth mindsets heats up (yet again), but also illustrates something important about scholarship.
Newsletter What the movie "The Jerk" has to teach us about source evaluation Deep source evaluation strategies may be backfiring in a non-intuitive way.
Newsletter You gotta love a study on bullshit. New evidence that only particular kinds of beliefs predict susceptibility to bad information
Newsletter How exactly does effective feedback work? Winstone and Nash have proposed a psychological science of effective feedback.
Newsletter The future of social media is not (just) connection. It's curation. Social media has been all about connecting people (e.g., Facebook’s mission statement is “to give people the power to build community and bring the world closer together”). That’s no longer enough. We want and need more from social media, and research has begun to show us how
Newsletter Want a good intro to AI? This is it. One of the best lines in Marvel Cinematic University history, if I do say so myself, is this one: Indeed, I often think about how “all words are made up” and therefore, they necessarily take on new meanings across times and cultures (except for “fetch” which no one ever made
Newsletter Artificial Intelligence in Education: Trash, Tool, or Tidal Wave? The amount of hype and energy around artificial intelligence (e.g., ChatGPT) in education is reaching Bitcoin^100 levels (I believe Bitcoin hype times itself 100 times is officially called a “Pets.com-plex”). Count me as extremely cautiously optimistic. People, not the AI itself, will ultimately determine whether it ends
Newsletter Do we need a refreshed theory of help-seeking? From my perspective, the help-seeking literature has kind of stalled out. That’s surprising because student help-seeking is pretty darn important. Students need to have the skills to know when they need help, to seek the appropriate type of help, and to implement that help to not only complete a
Newsletter A few thoughts on the Supreme Court decision on race-conscious admissions I’ve been thinking about the Supreme Court’s ruling regarding race-conscious admissions policies. On LinkedIn, Eldrin Deas prompted me to write something about that, but I wanted to do some reading first, because there’s a big difference between working in and thinking about higher education and actually studying
Newsletter A "type aloud" as I review a meta-analysis of digital game-based learning For this, my first post on digital learning research, I thought I’d do a “type aloud” (a term I just made up…I think). Often in my research I ask participants to “think aloud” as they work on something, in the hope of revealing not only what they are
Newsletter Oh, you want to listen to a podcast instead? Well, lucky for you I host a podcast on emerging research in educational psychology (studying the science of learning and instruction). You can check the podcast out here. Here’s a sample: Subscribe
Newsletter Coming soon... Be patient, my friends - I’ll be up and running soon. And yes, there’s a deep irony in the fact that the author of a Substack about learning in the modern, digital world needs some time to learn this modern, digital Substack thing. Start writing today. Use the