This link has been bookmarked by 11 people . It was first bookmarked on 05 Jul 2008, by bob sprankle.
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michael chalkfascinating article on bogus statistical research.. examples include a graph which has become famous.. but was never in the book it claims to come from. Will investigates this and other cases.
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Allison Kipta"People do NOT remember 10% of what they read, 20% of what they see, 30% of what they hear, etc. That information, and similar pronouncements are fraudulent. Moreover, general statements on the effectiveness of learning methods are not credible---learning results depend on too many variables to enable such precision. Unfortunately, this bogus information has been floating around our field for decades, crafted by many different authors and presented in many different configurations, including bastardizations of Dale's Cone. The rest of this article offers more detail."
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sean hobsonPeople do NOT remember 10% of what they read, 20% of what they see, 30% of what they hear, etc. That information, and similar pronouncements are fraudulent. Moreover, general statements on the effectiveness of learning methods are not credible---learning results depend on too many variables to enable such precision. Unfortunately, this bogus information has been floating around our field for decades, crafted by many different authors and presented in many different configurations, including bastardizations of Dale's Cone. The rest of this article offers more detail.
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Trevor HolmesThe famous % thing debunked
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bob spranklevalidating information
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sontimalontioh oops! debunking a graph that's been doing the rounds in instructional design...
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