"...attention to cultural values and the evolving platforms. Future research should also prioritize precise, ecologically valid measurement of digital media engagement..." (2/2)
@jeffgreene
Prof of Ed Psych & Learning Sciences at UNC-CH | Scholar, speaker, consultant studying how people learn in the digital world | APA & AERA Fellow | Journal & Handbook Editor | Book Author | Views are my own. https://linktr.ee/jeffgreene
"...attention to cultural values and the evolving platforms. Future research should also prioritize precise, ecologically valid measurement of digital media engagement..." (2/2)
Screenshot of the title page of an article published in JAMA Pediatrics titled: "Digital Media Use and Child Health and Development A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis."
Yup: "Promoting healthier digital engagement will require coordinated efforts across ecological levels, including family practices (eg, coviewing media), school-based digital literacy, regulatory oversight of industry, and..." #PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky (1/2) jamanetwork.com/journals/jam...
It is important to understand whether and how students regulate their motivation, using dynamic, high-volume data. @yekim.bsky.social et al. found motivation regulation strategies declined over time and were more focused on performance and behavior than value. #PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky
Do the Thing The Malcolm Gladwell version of the 10,000-Hour Rule is a myth, but the underlying idea is obviously true. You get better at things by doing them, so do the things you want to get better at. If you want to be a better reader, read. If you want to be a better writer, write. If you want to be a better public speaker, speak in public. A few corollaries are less obvious. The first is the sports aphorism to practice like you play. If you spend your time doing something that is somewhat but not really like the skill you want to develop, you will end up with that and not with what you wanted. If you write small, incremental papers because anything more ambitious feels like too much of a risk, you will only get good at writing small, incremental papers. If you take shortcuts and read in a hurry, you will get good at taking shortcuts and reading in a hurry. You have to do the thing itself. The second is to embrace failure. Donβt expect to be good when you start doing something new. Do it anyway. Think of yourself as a beginning musician playing notes to see how they sound together, or a beginning artist mixing paints to see what colors result. Create things purely for yourself. Fail fast and fail often. Love your mistakes, and learn from them. Make a mess, clean it up! The only way out is through.
I can write good abstracts not because I have a natural talent for it but because I have spent twenty years consciously practicing it.
The only way to get good at something is to keep working through the part where you're not good at it β¦ yet.
cf. james.grimmelmann.net/files/advice...
Forgive me for seeing self-regulation in everything, but this post really does emphasize how managing AI agents requires strong self- and other-regulation skills. Delegation, leadership, etc. all require knowledge and skill to help oneself and others effectively regulate toward desired goals.
It is important to understand whether and how students regulate their motivation, using dynamic, high-volume data. @yekim.bsky.social et al. found motivation regulation strategies declined over time and were more focused on performance and behavior than value. #PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky
I do think how we talk about things matters. We can frame social media problems in ways that help people feel in control while also acknowledging some people need help. And we can pass legislation that holds social media companies to standards and account.
wapo.st/4bwvwAE
This was really helpful.
How do students regulate their motivation across time? π€
We followed students week by week to examine planned motivational regulation strategies and which ones matter for achievement. We also show how these strategies are interconnected, with some acting as catalysts for others over time.
The Norwegian Consumer Council with an amazing video on enshittification and how to resist it.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=T4Up...
Are you asking about paper re: epistemic cognition? If so, I think a nice place to start is here: www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10....
I like @mikecaulfield.bsky.social's work a lot and he's really pushing how to prompt LLMs to produce better output. I do worry about LLMs' ability to search academic literature due to limited access to articles, though. In my experience, it returns limited sets of resources.
Great point. I wish more people thought of GenAI as a way to test/challenge their thinking, rather than replace it.
Agreed. Sadly, I'm seeing more and more "how GenAI can make your research workflow easier" and I'm just not convinced it's reliable enough for many/most parts of that workflow.
I understand the publish-or-perish pressure. But the reputational costs of including a fake citation are just too high. Why use unreliable #GenAI to generate or format ref lists when there are good options out there for easily inserting citations and refs, like Zotero?
Ah gotcha, thanks.
We definitely need more independent analysis, for sure. Iβd like greater visibility into usage data to inform laws about GenAI use. And small note: the report was written by Anthropic not OpenAI.
Picture of cover of the Handbook of Research on Learning and Instruction published by Routledge.
Excited (and grateful!) to have written a chapter on Learning to Monitor and Self-Regulate Learning in the latest edition of this super-helpful Handbook of Research on Learning and Instruction, with @christyhb.bsky.social and @mattbernacki.bsky.social!
ββ¦: AIβs economic impact could be real but constrained by reliability limits the industry hasnβt solved, by human and organizational barriers the industry doesnβt want to acknowledge, and by theoretical baselines that have always been more aspirational than measurement.β (2/2)
βThe standard story is that massive labor market disruption is comingβ¦and we need to prepare for it. The counter-story, the one Iβm defendingβwhich this data also supports, thatβs a crucial detailβis more complicatedβ¦β (1/2)
Screenshot of the title page of an article published in the journal "Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition" titled "Deliberate Memory Strategy Development: The Interplay of Childrenβs Self-Regulated Learning Abilities and Teachersβ Cognitive Processing Language."
Important study suggesting a link between teachers' use of language rich in strategy suggestions, metacognitive references, and discussion of memory and students' better self-regulated learning behavior growth across first and second grade. #PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky
doi.org/10.1037/mac0...
Really insightful podcast with @stephenaguilar.com and @galesinatra.bsky.social. Good discussion of how #GenAI can produce conceptual change and the identity and self-perception factors that significantly drive that change (or lack thereof).
I gave a talk today on learning sciences research and what I think it says (or not) about learning with Generative AI. I decided to record a version and post. I don't claim to have covered everything or to represent the field. I'd welcome constructive feedback. youtu.be/BNAObJqkmx0
Nice overview of various approaches to conceptualizing how people decide whether a claim can be considered true and if so, how (e.g., correspondence, coherence, pragmatism). I'd be excited to see these researchers intersect with the epistemic cognition literature. #PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky
I gave a talk today on learning sciences research and what I think it says (or not) about learning with Generative AI. I decided to record a version and post. I don't claim to have covered everything or to represent the field. I'd welcome constructive feedback. youtu.be/BNAObJqkmx0
Today I am living my best life.
As someone who studies self-regulated learning, I know I don't pay attention to emotion regulation as much as I should. So I'm grateful for work like this, that forces me to attend to this important aspect of regulation and academic success.#PsychSciSky #AcademicSky #EduSky
Can AI actually help us understand controversial topics, or is it just making things harder? I'm joined by learning expert @galesinatra.bsky.social to bridge the gap between complex ideas and artificial intelligence.
youtu.be/WjsDhmbxwns
Fascinating, thanks! βThe AI companies didnβt focus on PDF, because PDF is very hard, until they realized that, well, it turns out a lot of the really high-quality stuff is in fact in PDF, and so now we have to deal with it.β
This makes me wonder about ASReview and other apps.
Iβm really interested in this. Iβd love to hear more about what you are doing. Is the coding for research purposes?