Justifying Responses Affects the Relationship Between Confidence and Accuracy
How confident a student is about how they answer a question has important education implications. Participants answered 10 mathematics questions and provided their estimates of how likely they got each individual item correct and how many, in total, they answered correctly. They were overconfident i...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Experimental psychology 2024-05, Vol.71 (3), p.144-153 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | How confident a student is about how they answer a
question has important education implications. Participants answered 10
mathematics questions and provided their estimates of how likely they got each
individual item correct and how many, in total, they answered correctly. They
were overconfident in these metacognitive judgments. Some of the participants
were asked to justify why their answers were either correct or incorrect prior
to making these judgments. This lowered their confidence ratings. They were
still overconfident, but less than those in the control group. The instruction
also affected the association between the confidence ratings and accuracy. No
differences were observed between those asked to justify why their responses
were correct versus those asked to justify why their responses were incorrect.
Those asked to think about the accuracy of a response had lower confidence. This
has important implications for understanding how we construct confidence
judgments and within education how student confidence can be affected during
assessments. |
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ISSN: | 1618-3169 2190-5142 2190-5142 |
DOI: | 10.1027/1618-3169/a000612 |