Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations
The present study examined relations between obeying a rule (putting a rule into practice) versus transmitting the rule without practice across generations of participants. Undergraduates (N=96), composed of eight groups, four Practice and four No Practice, demonstrated that practice contributes sig...
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ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6252292017-08-12T03:00:34Z Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid Jacobs, W. Jake The present study examined relations between obeying a rule (putting a rule into practice) versus transmitting the rule without practice across generations of participants. Undergraduates (N=96), composed of eight groups, four Practice and four No Practice, demonstrated that practice contributes significantly to rule fidelity across generations. After four generations of rule transmission, participants without practice but exposed to traditional instruction-based learning, more slowly and less persistently followed the original rule than those with practice – apparently due to a loss of information across No Practice generations. That is, due to an absence of experiential learning, participants without practice apparently lost components of the instructions needed to effectively complete the task. The present results indicate that putting instructions into practice may be a useful training method for organizations, institutions, or research that requires accurate informational transfer from individual to individual. 2017 text Electronic Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625229 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/625229 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona. |
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en_US |
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NDLTD |
description |
The present study examined relations between obeying a rule (putting a rule into practice) versus transmitting the rule without practice across generations of participants. Undergraduates (N=96), composed of eight groups, four Practice and four No Practice, demonstrated that practice contributes significantly to rule fidelity across generations. After four generations of rule transmission, participants without practice but exposed to traditional instruction-based learning, more slowly and less persistently followed the original rule than those with practice – apparently due to a loss of information across No Practice generations. That is, due to an absence of experiential learning, participants without practice apparently lost components of the instructions needed to effectively complete the task. The present results indicate that putting instructions into practice may be a useful training method for organizations, institutions, or research that requires accurate informational transfer from individual to individual. |
author2 |
Jacobs, W. Jake |
author_facet |
Jacobs, W. Jake Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid |
author |
Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid |
spellingShingle |
Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations |
author_sort |
Tomlinson, Claire Sigrid |
title |
Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations |
title_short |
Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations |
title_full |
Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations |
title_fullStr |
Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations |
title_full_unstemmed |
Rule Governance: Implications for Practice and Rule Fidelity Across Four Generations |
title_sort |
rule governance: implications for practice and rule fidelity across four generations |
publisher |
The University of Arizona. |
publishDate |
2017 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625229 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/625229 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT tomlinsonclairesigrid rulegovernanceimplicationsforpracticeandrulefidelityacrossfourgenerations AT tomlinsonclairesigrid rulegovernanceimplicationsforpracticeandrulefidelityacrossfourgenerations |
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1718515793881202688 |