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Epistemic Trust and Education: Effects of Informant Reliability on Student Learning of Decimal Concepts

  • Autores: Kelley Durkin, Patrick Shafto
  • Localización: Child development, ISSN 0009-3920, Vol. 87, Nº. 1, 2016, págs. 154-164
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • The epistemic trust literature emphasizes that children's evaluations of informants’ trustworthiness affects learning, but there is no evidence that epistemic trust affects learning in academic domains. The current study investigated how reliability affects decimal learning. Fourth and fifth graders (N = 122; Mage = 10.1 years) compared examples from consistently accurate and inaccurate informants (consistent) or informants who were each sometimes accurate and inaccurate (inconsistent). Fourth graders had higher conceptual knowledge and fewer misconceptions in the consistent condition than the inconsistent condition, and vice versa for fifth graders due to differences in prior exposure to decimals. Given the same examples, learning differed depending on informant reliability. Thus, epistemic trust is a malleable factor that affects learning in an academic domain.


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