Megan A. Sumeracki

Megan A. Sumeracki
Rhode Island College | RIC · Department of Psychology

Ph.D.

About

40
Publications
112,637
Reads
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1,243
Citations
Introduction
Megan Sumeracki (formerly Megan Smith) is an Assistant Professor at Rhode Island College, currently studying retrieval-based learning strategies and the most effective ways to help students study effectively and efficiently on their own. She co-founded the Learning Scientists (www.learningscientists.org) in January 2016, a project dedicated to evidence-based practice and learning.
Additional affiliations
June 2015 - present
Rhode Island College
Position
  • Assistant Professor of Psychology
August 2014 - May 2015
Utah State University
Position
  • Assistant Professor of Psychology, USU Eastern
July 2011 - August 2014
Purdue University
Position
  • Graduate Researcher

Publications

Publications (40)
Article
Full-text available
Many experiments provide evidence that practicing retrieval benefits retention relative to conditions of no retrieval practice. Nearly all prior research has employed retrieval practice requiring overt responses, but a few experiments have shown that covert retrieval also produces retention advantages relative to control conditions. However, direct...
Article
Full-text available
Retrieval practice improves meaningful learning, and the most frequent way of implementing retrieval practice in classrooms is to have students answer questions. In four experiments (N=372) we investigated the effects of different question formats on learning. Students read educational texts and practised retrieval by answering short-answer, multip...
Article
Full-text available
Three experiments were aimed at adapting retrieval practice techniques that are effective with college students to work with elementary-school children. Children participated in their classrooms and completed activities with educational texts selected from the school curriculum. In Experiment 1, when children were asked to freely recall the texts,...
Article
Full-text available
We tested the predictions of 2 explanations for retrieval-based learning; while the elaborative retrieval hypothesis assumes that the retrieval of studied information promotes the generation of semantically related information, which aids in later retrieval (Carpenter, 2009), the episodic context account proposed by Karpicke, Lehman, and Aue (in pr...
Chapter
Full-text available
Testing in school is usually done for purposes of assessment, to assign students grades (from tests in classrooms) or rank them in terms of abilities (in standardized tests). Yet tests can serve other purposes in educational settings that greatly improve performance; this chapter reviews 10 other benefits of testing. Retrieval practice occurring du...
Chapter
Much research on the science of learning has originated in the field of cognitive psychology, where researchers examine basic processes of attention and memory in order to develop strategies for effective learning. Cognitive psychologists have determined six strategies with considerable evidence supporting their use. These strategies include spaced...
Article
Interleaving is an evidence-based, learning-science strategy that is relevant to the planning and implementation of continuing professional development (CPD). Mixing related but different areas of study forces the brain to reconcile the relationship between the areas while understanding each area well. By doing so, interleaving increases the likeli...
Article
Retrieval practice is an evidence-based, science of learning strategy that is relevant to the planning and implementation of continuing professional development (CPD). Retrieval practice requires one to examine long-term memory to work with priority information again in working memory. Retrieval practice improves learning in two ways. It improves m...
Article
Distributed practice is an evidence-based, learning-science strategy that is relevant to the planning and implementation of continuing professional development (CPD). Spacing-out study or practice over time allows the brain multiple opportunities to process new and complex information in an efficient way, thus increasing the likelihood of mastery a...
Article
Full-text available
Transfer of knowledge from one context to another is one of the paramount goals of education. Educators want their students to transfer what they are learning from one topic to the next, between courses, and into the "real world." However, it is also notoriously difficult to get students to successfully transfer concepts. This issue is of particula...
Article
Full-text available
Mind, Brain, and Education (MBE) science is by definition transdisciplinary. However, the communication and collaboration between constituent disciplines needed for true transdisciplinarity remains relatively rare. Consequently, many of the potential benefits of MBE science remain unrealized for parties on all sides of the discipline. The present c...
Article
For several decades, cognitive psychologists have been studying how we learn, and from this work it becomes possible to identify ways to help students learn in the classroom effectively. Importantly, this work does not just inform how to memorize facts, but also how to learn complex material in a way that allows students to apply what they are lear...
Article
Full-text available
The science of learning has made a considerable contribution to our understanding of effective teaching and learning strategies. However, few instructors outside of the field are privy to this research. In this tutorial review, we focus on six specific cognitive strategies that have received robust support from decades of research: spaced practice,...
Article
Full-text available
Psychological scientists have many roles, one of which is, arguably, to communicate their research findings to a broader audience. Twitter and blogging offer relatively inexpensive options for this type of outreach. Engagement in these outreach efforts can lead to career enhancement, but also comes at a cost. We examined a sample of 327 psychologic...
Article
Psychological scientists have many roles, one of which is, arguably, to communicate their research findings to a broader audience. Twitter and blogging offer relatively inexpensive options for this type of outreach. Engagement in these outreach efforts can lead to career enhancement, but also comes at a cost. We examined a sample of 327 psychologic...
Chapter
Full-text available
Psychological scientists have made significant advances in applying cognitive research to education. Here, we provide a concise, teacher-ready overview of four evidence-based teaching strategies: (1) providing visual examples; (2) teaching students to explain and to do; (3) spaced practice; and (4) frequent quizzing. Converging evidence from contro...
Article
The purpose of this investigation was to identify ways to prompt retrieval practice to make recall even more effective at producing meaningful learning. In two experiments, subjects read educational texts and practiced retrieval across two periods. During prompted retrieval, subjects were cued to explain and describe concepts from the text, whereas...
Article
Full-text available
A wealth of research has demonstrated that practicing retrieval is a powerful way to enhance learning. However, nearly all prior research has examined retrieval practice with college students. Little is known about retrieval practice in children, and even less is known about possible individual differences in retrieval practice. In three experiment...
Article
Full-text available
This introduction discusses the importance of basic science work that bridges the laboratory and the classroom. This issue includes articles that help explain the trickiness of the translation of psychological science to education.
Article
Full-text available
Three experiments were aimed at adapting retrieval practice techniques that are effective with college students to work with elementary school children. Children participated in their classrooms and completed activities with educational texts selected from the school curriculum. In Experiment 1, when children were asked to freely recall the texts,...
Article
Full-text available
The customary assumption in the study of human learning using alternating study and test trials is that learning occurs during study trials and that test trials are useful only to measure learning. In fact, tests seem to play little role in the development of learning, because the learning curve is similar even when the number of test trials varies...

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