Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs

Abstract Teachers sometimes believe in the efficacy of instructional practices that have little empirical support. These beliefs have proven difficult to efface despite strong challenges to their evidentiary basis. Teachers typically develop causal beliefs about the efficacy of instructional practic...

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Main Authors: Kit S. Double, Julie Y. L. Chow, Evan J. Livesey, Therese N. Hopfenbeck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2020-08-01
Series:Cognitive Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41235-020-00237-2
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spelling doaj-72f73e5a292f432fa677dfa0c40e601a2020-11-25T03:51:46ZengSpringerOpenCognitive Research2365-74642020-08-015112010.1186/s41235-020-00237-2Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefsKit S. Double0Julie Y. L. Chow1Evan J. Livesey2Therese N. Hopfenbeck3Department of Education, University of OxfordUniversity of SydneyUniversity of SydneyDepartment of Education, University of OxfordAbstract Teachers sometimes believe in the efficacy of instructional practices that have little empirical support. These beliefs have proven difficult to efface despite strong challenges to their evidentiary basis. Teachers typically develop causal beliefs about the efficacy of instructional practices by inferring their effect on students’ academic performance. Here, we evaluate whether causal inferences about instructional practices are susceptible to an outcome density effect using a contingency learning task. In a series of six experiments, participants were ostensibly presented with students’ assessment outcomes, some of whom had supposedly received teaching via a novel technique and some of whom supposedly received ordinary instruction. The distributions of the assessment outcomes was manipulated to either have frequent positive outcomes (high outcome density condition) or infrequent positive outcomes (low outcome density condition). For both continuous and categorical assessment outcomes, participants in the high outcome density condition rated the novel instructional technique as effective, despite the fact that it either had no effect or had a negative effect on outcomes, while the participants in the low outcome density condition did not. These results suggest that when base rates of performance are high, participants may be particularly susceptible to drawing inaccurate inferences about the efficacy of instructional practices.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41235-020-00237-2Teacher beliefsOutcome density effectFalse beliefsCausal illusionsContingency learning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kit S. Double
Julie Y. L. Chow
Evan J. Livesey
Therese N. Hopfenbeck
spellingShingle Kit S. Double
Julie Y. L. Chow
Evan J. Livesey
Therese N. Hopfenbeck
Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
Cognitive Research
Teacher beliefs
Outcome density effect
False beliefs
Causal illusions
Contingency learning
author_facet Kit S. Double
Julie Y. L. Chow
Evan J. Livesey
Therese N. Hopfenbeck
author_sort Kit S. Double
title Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
title_short Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
title_full Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
title_fullStr Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
title_full_unstemmed Causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
title_sort causal illusions in the classroom: how the distribution of student outcomes can promote false instructional beliefs
publisher SpringerOpen
series Cognitive Research
issn 2365-7464
publishDate 2020-08-01
description Abstract Teachers sometimes believe in the efficacy of instructional practices that have little empirical support. These beliefs have proven difficult to efface despite strong challenges to their evidentiary basis. Teachers typically develop causal beliefs about the efficacy of instructional practices by inferring their effect on students’ academic performance. Here, we evaluate whether causal inferences about instructional practices are susceptible to an outcome density effect using a contingency learning task. In a series of six experiments, participants were ostensibly presented with students’ assessment outcomes, some of whom had supposedly received teaching via a novel technique and some of whom supposedly received ordinary instruction. The distributions of the assessment outcomes was manipulated to either have frequent positive outcomes (high outcome density condition) or infrequent positive outcomes (low outcome density condition). For both continuous and categorical assessment outcomes, participants in the high outcome density condition rated the novel instructional technique as effective, despite the fact that it either had no effect or had a negative effect on outcomes, while the participants in the low outcome density condition did not. These results suggest that when base rates of performance are high, participants may be particularly susceptible to drawing inaccurate inferences about the efficacy of instructional practices.
topic Teacher beliefs
Outcome density effect
False beliefs
Causal illusions
Contingency learning
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41235-020-00237-2
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