Why does explaining help learning? Insight from an explanation impairment effect

Year of Conference
2010

Type

Conference Proceedings
Abstract

Engaging in explanation, even to oneself, can enhance learning. What underlies this effect? Williams & Lombrozo (in press) propose that explanation exerts subsumptive constraints on processing, driving learners to discover underlying patterns. A category-learning experiment demonstrates that explanation can enhance or impair learning depending on whether these constraints match the structure of the material being learned. Explaining can help learning when reliable patterns are present, but actually impairs learning when patterns are misleading. This explanation impairment effect is predicted by the subsumptive constraints account, but challenges alternative hypotheses according to which explaining helps learning by increasing task engagement through motivation, attention, or processing time. The findings have both theoretical and practical implications for learning and education.

Conference Name
Proceedings of the 32nd Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society
Pages
2906-2911
Publisher
Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society
Documents

Editors:

Stellan Ohlsson

Richard Catrambone