Submission 102
The Interleaving Effect: Understanding and Reversing a Metacognitive Illusion.
SymposiumTalk-02
Presented by: David Shanks
Interleaving exemplars leads to far better inductive learning than blocking them. This research aims to shed light on why learners (both adults and children) hold the misconception that blocking is a more effective strategy than interleaving. In children, this metacognitive bias intensifies with age, leading older children to be less willing to use interleaving during self-regulated inductive learning. To understand the roots of this bias, we examined environmental influences and found that parents of older children are more likely to arrange study sessions in a blocked fashion compared to those of younger children, and school textbooks across elementary grades show a growing prevalence of blocked practice problems, suggesting that family and school contexts reinforce this bias over time. Finally, an intervention that reverses the illusion in adults and leads to advantageous interleaving choices is described.