Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions

For hundreds of years, magic tricks have been employed within a variety of pedagogic contexts, including promoting science and mathematics, delivering educational messaging, enhancing scepticism about the paranormal, and boosting creative thinking for product design. This review examines this divers...

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Main Authors: Richard Wiseman, Caroline Watt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2020-03-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/8747.pdf
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spelling doaj-78ca76af07be4dbbb65c6b77811f97b32020-11-25T01:45:43ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592020-03-018e874710.7717/peerj.8747Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventionsRichard Wiseman0Caroline Watt1School of Psychology and Sport Science, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, United KingdomSchool of Philosophy, Psychology and Language Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Midlothian, United KingdomFor hundreds of years, magic tricks have been employed within a variety of pedagogic contexts, including promoting science and mathematics, delivering educational messaging, enhancing scepticism about the paranormal, and boosting creative thinking for product design. This review examines this diverse body of work, focusing on studies that have assessed the impact of such interventions. Although the studies tended to yield positive outcomes, much of the work suffered from methodological shortcomings, including measuring the impact of interventions over a relatively short period of time, focusing on self-report measures and failing to employ control groups. The paper makes several recommendations for future study in the area, including assessing the longer-term impact of magic-based interventions, comparing these interventions to other types of pedagogic techniques, focussing on knowledge retention and behavioural outcomes, and collaborating with magicians to develop more impactful interventions.https://peerj.com/articles/8747.pdfMagicPsychologyEducationCognitionBeliefScience
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Richard Wiseman
Caroline Watt
spellingShingle Richard Wiseman
Caroline Watt
Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
PeerJ
Magic
Psychology
Education
Cognition
Belief
Science
author_facet Richard Wiseman
Caroline Watt
author_sort Richard Wiseman
title Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
title_short Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
title_full Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
title_fullStr Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
title_full_unstemmed Conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
title_sort conjuring cognition: a review of educational magic-based interventions
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2020-03-01
description For hundreds of years, magic tricks have been employed within a variety of pedagogic contexts, including promoting science and mathematics, delivering educational messaging, enhancing scepticism about the paranormal, and boosting creative thinking for product design. This review examines this diverse body of work, focusing on studies that have assessed the impact of such interventions. Although the studies tended to yield positive outcomes, much of the work suffered from methodological shortcomings, including measuring the impact of interventions over a relatively short period of time, focusing on self-report measures and failing to employ control groups. The paper makes several recommendations for future study in the area, including assessing the longer-term impact of magic-based interventions, comparing these interventions to other types of pedagogic techniques, focussing on knowledge retention and behavioural outcomes, and collaborating with magicians to develop more impactful interventions.
topic Magic
Psychology
Education
Cognition
Belief
Science
url https://peerj.com/articles/8747.pdf
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