Hypercorrection of high confidence errors: Prior testing both enhances delayed performance and blocks the return of the errors |
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Affiliation: | 1. Columbia University, United States;2. Boston College, United States;1. Washington University in St. Louis, United States;2. Fort Zumwalt School District, United States;1. Lindenwood University, United States;2. Washington University in Saint Louis, United States;1. Duke University, United States;2. University of Texas at El Paso, United States |
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Abstract: | How people correct their mistakes and sustain those corrections over time is a problem of central interest to education. It might be thought that the erroneous beliefs that people hold with high confidence would be especially difficult to correct. Interestingly, people correct these high confidence errors more easily than low confidence errors, a phenomenon known as the ‘hypercorrection effect’. Unfortunately, though, with a delay in testing there is a tendency for some of these high confidence errors to reemerge – a finding with serious consequences for education. This study investigated the effect of intervening a test immediately after corrective feedback on preventing the return of the errors. It also investigated processing differences between prevention-focused and promotion-focused people. The most educationally important new finding was that testing immediately after corrective feedback not only greatly enhanced memory for the correct answers but also blocked the return of the errors. |
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Keywords: | Hypercorrection Error correction Testing benefits Metacognition Confidence judgments Updating |
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