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Higher Education Outcomes at the National Level on the Example of the Project “Collegiate Learning Assessment”
Author(s) -
E.V. Sabelnikova,
N.L. Khmeleva
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
psychological science and education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.215
H-Index - 2
eISSN - 2311-7273
pISSN - 1814-2052
DOI - 10.17759/pse.2015200202
Subject(s) - higher order thinking , psychology , interpretation (philosophy) , mathematics education , context (archaeology) , quality (philosophy) , order (exchange) , critical thinking , computer science , teaching method , epistemology , cognitively guided instruction , economics , biology , programming language , paleontology , philosophy , finance
We discuss the interpretation of the concept of “learning outcomes”. Theoretical analysis widely represents the interpretations of the learning outcomes of a high school student: academic skills: understanding, application of knowledge to solve problems, synthesis, analysis and evaluation; basic skills and basic knowledge, and skills of a higher order and advanced knowledge; skills of a higher order represented as a system of critical thinking, analytic reasoning, problem solving and written communication; wide abilities interpreted as verbal, quantitative and spatial thinking, understanding, problem solving and decision making. We conclude that each considered approach distinguishes meta-subjective skills, i.e. skills to interact with the quality of information regardless of the context. The ability to measure the meta-skills is discussed on an example of the “Collegiate learning assessment”, realized in the United States.

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