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Text Generation Benefits Learning: a Meta-Analytic Review

Julia Schindler, Tobias Richter

2023Educational Psychology Review12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Learning can be made more efficient when learners generate the to-be-learned text contents instead of passively receiving them. A multi-level meta-analysis was conducted to provide an overall estimate of the text generation effect’s magnitude and to identify theoretically and practically relevant moderators. Overall, generation interventions improved learning with texts compared to reading them (Hedges’ g = .41). This benefit was not attributable to time-on-task and was found across several learning conditions and settings (e.g., narratives and expository texts, multiple generation, and learning assessment tasks). The meta-analysis further suggests that generation benefits learning most strongly if the cognitive processes stimulated by the generation task complement those processes already stimulated by the text. In sum, the findings suggest that text generation can be suitable for educational applications especially if certain conditions are observed.

Topics & Concepts

Educational psychologyComplement (music)Task (project management)Reading (process)Text generationPsychologyCognitive psychologyMeta-analysisPsychological interventionCognitionNarrativeComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceNatural language processingMathematics educationLinguisticsMedicineManagementPhenotypeComplementationEconomicsGenePsychiatryBiochemistryNeurosciencePhilosophyChemistryInternal medicineText Readability and SimplificationEducational Strategies and EpistemologiesIntelligent Tutoring Systems and Adaptive Learning
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