The CLIA-model: A framework for designing powerful learning environments for thinking and problem solving |
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Authors: | Erik De Corte Lieven Verschaffel Chris Masui |
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Institution: | (1) North Carolina State University, Curriculum & Instruction, 602D Poe Hall, Raleigh, NC 27695, USA;(2) The University of West Georgia, Maple St., Carrollton, GA, USA |
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Abstract: | A major challenge for education and educational research is to build on our present understanding of learning for designing
environments for education that are conducive to fostering in students self-regulatory and cooperative learning skills, transferable
knowledge, and a disposition toward competent thinking and problem solving. Taking into account inquiry-based knowledge on
learning and recent instructional research, this article presents the CLIA-model (Competence, Learning, Intervention, Assessment)
as a framework for the design of learning environments aimed to be powerful in eliciting in students learning processes that
facilitate the acquisition of productive knowledge and competent learning and thinking skills. Next, two intervention studies
are described that embody major components of this framework, one focussing on mathematical problem solving in primary school,
and a second one relating to self-regulatory skills in university freshmen. Both studies were carried out in parallel with
the development of the framework, and were instrumental in identifying and specifying the different components of the model.
They yielded both promising initial support for the model by showing that CLIA-based learning environments are indeed powerful
in facilitating in students the acquisition of high-literacy learning results, especially the acquisition and transfer of
self-regulation skills for learning and problem solving. |
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