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The Testing Effect Is Alive and Well with Complex Materials

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Abstract

Van Gog and Sweller (2015) claim that there is no testing effect—no benefit of practicing retrieval—for complex materials. We show that this claim is incorrect on several grounds. First, Van Gog and Sweller’s idea of “element interactivity” is not defined in a quantitative, measurable way. As a consequence, the idea is applied inconsistently in their literature review. Second, none of the experiments on retrieval practice with worked-example materials manipulated element interactivity. Third, Van Gog and Sweller’s literature review omitted several studies that have shown retrieval practice effects with complex materials, including studies that directly manipulated the complexity of the materials. Fourth, the experiments that did not show retrieval practice effects, which were emphasized by Van Gog and Sweller, either involved retrieval of isolated words in individual sentences or required immediate, massed retrieval practice. The experiments failed to observe retrieval practice effects because of the retrieval tasks, not because of the complexity of the materials. Finally, even though the worked-example experiments emphasized by Van Gog and Sweller have methodological problems, they do not show strong evidence favoring the null. Instead, the data provide evidence that there is indeed a small positive effect of retrieval practice with worked examples. Retrieval practice remains an effective way to improve meaningful learning of complex materials.

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Notes

  1. http://lsa.colorado.edu

  2. http://cohmetrix.com/

  3. Kang et al. (2007) used 3000-word articles from Current Directions in Psychological Science. These earned a "High?" rating, with the question mark in the original.

  4. We used the “BayesFactor” package (Morey and Rouder 2015) in the R programing language (R core team, 2014).

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Acknowledgments

We thank James Nairne, the Purdue Cognition and Learning Laboratory, and Roddy Roediger and the Washington University Memory Laboratory for the comments on the manuscript. We also thank Mario de Jonge for providing materials.

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Correspondence to Jeffrey D. Karpicke.

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Karpicke, J.D., Aue, W.R. The Testing Effect Is Alive and Well with Complex Materials. Educ Psychol Rev 27, 317–326 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10648-015-9309-3

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