Self-Regulated Learning and Academic Achievement

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Academic Learning Skill
Academic Self-regulation
Category=JNC
Category=JNT
Child's SRL
classroom intervention methods
Co-regulated Learning
cognitive development
conditional
Domain Specific Self-concept
educational psychology
Egocentric Speech
Emergent Interaction
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eq_nobargain
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instructional design
knowledge
learning motivation
metacognitive strategies
Performance Control Phase
Played Back
Psychophysical Dualism
Self-directed Speech
Self-efficacy Measures
Self-evaluative Standards
Self-identity Measures
self-instructive
Self-instructive Statements
Self-regulated Learning Strategies
self-system
Self-system Structures
selfregulated
Selfregulation Process
SRL
SRL Process
statements
strategies
structures
tasks
theoretical models of student self-regulation
volitional
Volitional Aspects
Volitional Control
Volitional Processes
Volitional Strategies
Vygotskian Perspective

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805835618
  • Weight: 620g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2001
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This volume brings together internationally known researchers representing different theoretical perspectives on students' self-regulation of learning. Diverse theories on how students become self-regulated learners are compared in terms of their conceptual origins, scientific form, research productivity, and pedagogical effectiveness. This is the only comprehensive comparison of diverse classical theories of self-regulated learning in print.

The first edition of this text, published in 1989, presented descriptions of such differing perspectives as operant, phenomenological, social learning, volitional, Vygotskian, and constructivist theories. In this new edition, the same prominent editors and authors reassess these classic models in light of a decade of very productive research. In addition, an information processing perspective is included, reflecting its growing prominence.

Self-regulation models have proven especially appealing to teachers, coaches, and tutors looking for specific recommendations regarding how students activate, alter, and sustain their learning practices. Techniques for enhancing these processes have been studied with considerable success in tutoring sessions, computer learning programs, coaching sessions, and self-directed practice sessions. The results of these applications are discussed in this new edition.

The introductory chapter presents a historical overview of research and a theoretical framework for comparing and contrasting the theories described in the following chapters, all of which follow a common organizational format. This parallel format enables the book to function like an authored textbook rather than a typical edited volume. The final chapter offers an historical assessment of changes in theory and trends for future research.

This volume is especially relevant for students and professionals in educational psychology, school psychology, guidance and counseling, developmental psychology, child and family development, as well as for students in general teacher education.

Zimmerman, Barry J.; Schunk, Dale H.