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The role of intelligence and feedback in children’s strategy competence
Authors:Koen Luwel  Ageliki Foustana  Lieven Verschaffel
Affiliation:a Center for Instructional Psychology and Technology, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium
b Department of Special Education and Psychology, University of Athens, 15784 Athens, Greece
Abstract:A test-intervention-test study was conducted investigating the role of intelligence on four parameters of strategy competence in the context of a numerosity judgment task. Moreover, the effectiveness of two feedback types on these four parameters was tested. In the two test sessions, the choice/no-choice method was used to assess the strategy repertoire, frequency, efficiency, and adaptivity of a group of low-, average-, and high-intelligence children. During the intervention, half of the participants from each intelligence group were given outcome feedback (OFB), whereas the other half received strategy feedback (SFB). The pretest data showed large differences among the three intelligence groups on all four strategy parameters. These differences had disappeared at the posttest due to a particularly strong improvement on all strategy parameters in the low-intelligence group. Furthermore, it was found that SFB was more beneficial than OFB for all parameters involving strategy selection. These results indicate that intelligence plays an important role in children’s strategy use and suggest that strategy feedback can be a powerful instructional tool, especially for low-intelligence children.
Keywords:Strategy choice   Strategy use   Intelligence   Outcome feedback   Strategy feedback   Choice/no-choice method
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