Supportive error feedback fosters students' adaptive reactions towards errors: Evidence from a targeted online intervention with Italian middle school students

Author:

Soncini Annalisa1ORCID,Matteucci Maria Cristina2ORCID,Tomasetto Carlo3ORCID,Butera Fabrizio4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Developmental, Family and Systems Psychology (Défasy) Free University of Brussels Bruxelles Belgium

2. Department of Education Sciences University of Bologna Bologna Italy

3. Department of Psychology University of Bologna Cesena Italy

4. Institute of Psychology University of Lausanne Lausanne Switzerland

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAlthough it is well established that students' adaptive reactions towards errors promote learning outcomes, little is still known about the role of error feedback in promoting these reactions.AimThrough a targeted intervention based on an online teaching unit, this study aimed at testing whether supportive error feedback promotes more adaptive students' reactions towards errors and higher learning outcomes.SampleA total of 250 (Mage  = 12.18, SD = .89; 46.4% girls) Italian middle school students took part in the intervention. Students were randomly assigned to either a discouraging error feedback condition (n  = 124) or a supportive error feedback condition (n  = 126).MethodThe intervention consisted of an online teaching unit, which students filled in at home, that was divided into pre‐test, intervention and post‐test phases. During the intervention, students replied to training questions and every time they made an error, informative feedback appeared: supportive smileys and sentences in the supportive feedback condition, and disappointed smileys and sentences in the discouraging feedback condition. Before the intervention, students filled in the pre‐test and after the intervention, students reported their reactions towards errors and filled in the post‐test.ResultsReceiving supportive feedback resulted in more adaptive affective‐motivational reactions towards errors, which in turn were related to more adaptive action reactions towards errors. Differently from our expectations, action reactions towards errors were not related to the post‐test scores.ConclusionsOur findings can inform the development of online teaching units that promote an error‐oriented approach.

Publisher

Wiley

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