Students face various learning challenges in their daily life. Teachers should teach them learning strategies to accommodate demands. One hundred ten fifth graders were randomly assigned to three groups: strategic notetaking, partial strategic notetaking, and control group, with three levels (high versus medium versus low) according to their prior science achievement. The levels also functioned as one independent variable in the MANCOVA analysis, with writing speed as covariate. The results showed significant treatment main effects in support of strategic and partial strategic groups on the measurements of board cued, verbal cued, and noncued information units. The high science achievement group outperformed the low one on the task of verbal cued, whereas the medium outperformed the low one on comprehension multiple-choice test. The study suggested notetaking as an effective learning strategy that can be taught to elementary students.
CITATION STYLE
Lee, P.-L., Wang, C.-L., Hamman, D., Hsiao, C.-H., & Huang, C.-H. (2013). Notetaking Instruction Enhances Students’ Science Learning. Child Development Research, 2013, 1–8. https://doi.org/10.1155/2013/831591
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