Harold M. Schroder
Princeton University
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Featured researches published by Harold M. Schroder.
Psychological Reports | 1965
Siegfried Streufert; M. A. Clardy; M. J. Driver; Marvin Karlins; Harold M. Schroder; Peter Suedfeld
An experimental simulation is described as a prototype for research concerned with the analysis of human information processing characteristics in complex environments. The method employs a simulated war game environment which lends itself to the analysis of performance and perceptual characteristics of individuals and social groups. Suggestions for procedures, space requirements and measurement techniques are included.
Psychological Reports | 1967
Marvin Karlins; Harold M. Schroder
A pedagogical innovation, the Inductive Teaching Program (ITP), is presented. The ITP contains a set of facts about a specific problem, situation or academic subject, stored on individual cards, analogous to the memory storage banks utilized by computers. The student is charged with the responsibility of getting these facts by the “inquiry” method: asking questions that will solicit these pieces of information. The applications of the ITP in education and educational research are examined, and its linking role between discovery learning and creativity investigations reviewed.
Psychonomic science | 1967
Marvin Karlins; Thomas L. Coffman; Helmut Lamm; Harold M. Schroder
Individuals varying in their level of integrative complexity (Schroder, Driver, & Streufert, 1966) requested information about a novel environment for use in solving a complex problem. Ss who are integratively complex are more active in this type of learning task (ask more questions) and request different types of information than their integratively simple counterparts.
Psychonomic science | 1967
Marvin Karlins; Robert E. Lee; Harold M. Schroder
This study found consistent individual differences in Ss information search patterns (questioning frequency and category sampling) across three problem-solving tasks, a relationship between this behavior and Guilford’s productivity measure of creativity (Uses for Things), and an independence of both creativity and information request from intelligence.
American Journal of Psychology | 1963
Mary Henle; O. J. Harvey; David E. Hunt; Harold M. Schroder
American Journal of Psychology | 1970
Ray Hyman; Harold M. Schroder; Michael J. Driver; Siegfried Streufert
Psychological Monographs: General and Applied | 1957
Harold M. Schroder; David E. Hunt
Journal of Marriage and Family | 1968
Bryant Crouse; Marvin Karlins; Harold M. Schroder
Journal of Personality | 1958
Harold M. Schroder; David E. Hunt
Journal of Personality | 1957
John McDAVID; Harold M. Schroder