“…Examples of various attempts to make teaching and learning more adaptive can be found in both the early and current research literature. They include, though not limited to, mastery learning (e.g., Bloom, 1968), Personalized Systems of Instruction or PSI (e.g., Keller, 1968; Gifford & Vicks, 1982; Davies, 1981), assorted forms of peer instruction (e.g., Mazur, 1997), various reciprocal reading/writing activities (e.g., Huang & Yang, 2015; MacArthur, Schwartz & Graham, 1991), adaptive hypermedia (Brusilovsky, 2001), accommodation for individual learning styles (e.g., Özyurt & Özyurt, 2015) and more recent Intelligent Tutoring Systems or ITS (e.g., Huang & Shiu, 2012; VanLehn, 2011). To some extent, findings of primary research on these and related instructional practices have been summarized in two rather sparse collections of meta‐analyses separated in time by almost three decades.…”