Review Article
Free
Learning from Errors
- Janet Metcalfe1
- View Affiliations and Author NotesHide Affiliations and Author NotesDepartment of Psychology, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027; email:[email protected]
- Vol. 68:465-489(Volume publication date January 2017)
- First published as a Review in Advance onSeptember 14, 2016
- © Annual Reviews
- View CitationHide Citation
Janet Metcalfe. 2017. Learning from Errors.Annual Review Psychology.68:465-489.https://doi.org/10.1146/annurev-psych-010416-044022
Abstract
Although error avoidance during learning appears to be the rule in American classrooms, laboratory studies suggest that it may be a counterproductive strategy, at least for neurologically typical students. Experimental investigations indicate that errorful learning followed by corrective feedback is beneficial to learning. Interestingly, the beneficial effects are particularly salient when individuals strongly believe that their error is correct: Errors committed with high confidence are corrected more readily than low-confidence errors. Corrective feedback, including analysis of the reasoning leading up to the mistake, is crucial. Aside from the direct benefit to learners, teachers gain valuable information from errors, and error tolerance encourages students’ active, exploratory, generative engagement. If the goal is optimal performance in high-stakes situations, it may be worthwhile to allow and even encourage students to commit and correct errors while they are in low-stakes learning situations rather than to assiduously avoid errors at all costs.





