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CarolAnne M. Kardash

Researcher at University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Publications -  36
Citations -  2738

CarolAnne M. Kardash is an academic researcher from University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The author has contributed to research in topics: Academic achievement & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 35 publications receiving 2587 citations. Previous affiliations of CarolAnne M. Kardash include University of Missouri.

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Evaluation of undergraduate research experience: Perceptions of undergraduate interns and their faculty mentors.

TL;DR: The authors evaluated the extent to which 14 research skills were enhanced by science undergraduates' participation in an undergraduate research experience (URE) Fifty-seven undergraduates self-rated their ability to perform the skills at the beginning and end of the URE Faculty mentors' ratings of their respective interns' skills served as an objective measure of intern skill level.
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Effects of preexisiting beliefs, epistemological beliefs, and need for cognition on interpretation of controversial issues.

TL;DR: This article examined the influence of people's beliefs about the certainty of knowledge, the strength of their beliefs about a controversial issue, and their tendency to enjoy effortful thinking on their interpretation of controversial information.
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Effects of epistemological beliefs and topic-specific beliefs on undergraduates' cognitive and strategic processing of dual-positional text.

TL;DR: The authors investigated the effects of epistemological beliefs and topic-specific beliefs on undergraduates' cognitive and strategic processing of a dual-positional text and found that cognitive processes for developing awareness were related negatively to the number of distortions produced.
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The Effects of Goal Instructions and Text on the Generation of Counterarguments During Writing.

TL;DR: The authors investigated ways of encouraging students to consider more counterarguments when writing argumentative texts and found that text positively affects counterargumentation and the overall quality of arguments and that text was only effective for students with less extreme prior attitudes.