2023
DOI: 10.31234/osf.io/9rqpm
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Pan & Carpenter (2023) Prequestioning and Pretesting Effects: A Review of Empirical Research, Theoretical Perspectives, and Applications

Abstract: Testing students on information that they do not know might seem like a fruitless endeavor. After all, why give anyone a test that they are guaranteed to fail because they have not yet learned the material? Remarkably, a growing body of research indicates that such testing—formally known as prequestioning or pretesting—can benefit learning if there is an opportunity to study the correct answers afterwards. This prequestioning effect or pretesting effect has been successfully demonstrated with a variety of le… Show more

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