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Dive into the research topics where Leila E. Ferguson is active.

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Featured researches published by Leila E. Ferguson.


Reading Psychology | 2015

Establishing Trustworthiness When Students Read Multiple Documents Containing Conflicting Scientific Evidence.

Ivar Bråten; Jason L. G. Braasch; Helge I. Strømsø; Leila E. Ferguson

Students read six documents that varied in terms of their perspectives on a scientific issue and the trustworthiness of the source features. After reading, students wrote essays, rank-ordered the documents according to perceived trustworthiness, and provided reasons for their rank-order decisions. Students put the most trust in a textbook and a public information text, primarily giving content reasons for their trustworthiness judgments. The kind of source characteristics that students drew upon when deciding what to trust and what not to trust varied across documents. Finally, their source evaluation was related to the source citations included in their essays.


Educational Psychology | 2016

Beliefs about justification for knowing when ethnic majority and ethnic minority students read multiple conflicting documents

Helge I. Strømsø; Ivar Bråten; Øistein Anmarkrud; Leila E. Ferguson

We examined the role of justification for knowing beliefs in learning and comprehension when ethnic majority and ethnic minority students from the same school classes read five conflicting documents on the scientific issue of sun exposure and health. Results showed that the more ethnic minority students trusted scientific authorities and the less they relied on personal opinion when validating knowledge claims in the domain of science, the more they learned from and the better they comprehended the documents. In contrast, justification for knowing beliefs did not seem to play a role in learning and comprehension among ethnic majority students. These results may reflect that the documents represented more of a challenge to the ethnic minority students, with justification beliefs affecting learning and comprehension processes to a greater extent when the task is perceived as an ill-structured problem. This study is probably the first to indicate different relationships between various justification beliefs and performance in different language and cultural groups, having theoretical as well as educational implications.


Archive | 2013

Comprehending Multiple Texts

Øistein Anmarkrud; Leila E. Ferguson

In their academic lives, students are commonly invited to make use of multiple texts when carrying out assignments, such as project work. Also during leisure time, students may typically encounter conflicting information, in the form of websites, articles, blogs, advertisements and social media.


Cognition and Instruction | 2013

Spontaneous Sourcing Among Students Reading Multiple Documents

Helge I. Strømsø; Ivar Bråten; M. Anne Britt; Leila E. Ferguson


Learning and Instruction | 2012

Epistemic Cognition when Students Read Multiple Documents Containing Conflicting Scientific Evidence: A Think-Aloud Study.

Leila E. Ferguson; Ivar Bråten; Helge I. Strømsø


Contemporary Educational Psychology | 2013

Promoting secondary school students’ evaluation of source features of multiple documents

Jason L. G. Braasch; Ivar Bråten; Helge I. Strømsø; Øistein Anmarkrud; Leila E. Ferguson


Learning and Instruction | 2013

Student profiles of knowledge and epistemic beliefs: Changes and relations to multiple-text comprehension

Leila E. Ferguson; Ivar Bråten


British Journal of Educational Psychology | 2014

Students Working with Multiple Conflicting Documents on a Scientific Issue: Relations between Epistemic Cognition while Reading and Sourcing and Argumentation in Essays.

Ivar Bråten; Leila E. Ferguson; Helge I. Strømsø; Øistein Anmarkrud


European Journal of Psychology of Education | 2013

Justification beliefs and multiple-documents comprehension

Ivar Bråten; Leila E. Ferguson; Helge I. Strømsø; Øistein Anmarkrud


Reading and Writing | 2013

Prediction of learning and comprehension when adolescents read multiple texts: the roles of word-level processing, strategic approach, and reading motivation

Ivar Bråten; Leila E. Ferguson; Øistein Anmarkrud; Helge I. Strømsø

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Jo Lunn Brownlee

Queensland University of Technology

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M. Anne Britt

Northern Illinois University

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Mary Ryan

Queensland University of Technology

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