Z. Chen et al., CONSTRAINTS ON ACCESSING ABSTRACT SOURCE INFORMATION - INSTANTIATION OF PRINCIPLES FACILITATES CHILDRENS ANALOGICAL TRANSFER, Journal of educational psychology, 87(3), 1995, pp. 445-454
An abstract principle provided as source information alone often fails
to enhance analogical transfer. Two experiments were conducted to inv
estigate the circumstances under which an abstract statement promotes
analogical problem solving in children. External instantiation (provid
ing concrete examples, with similar or dissimilar surface features alo
ng with an abstract statement) and internal instantiation (encouraging
learners to generate concrete examples of the abstract statement) wer
e equally effective in facilitating transfer. Adding explicit causal r
elations in the source statements did not significantly enhance transf
er. These results suggest that abstract information by itself is less
accessible because it lacks superficial features similar to the target
problem and lacks example-specific contextual information. Educationa
l implications of the effects of external and internal instantiations
are discussed.