Self-regulation of Learning and Performance

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Ability Beliefs
academic persistence
Academic Self-regulation
Achievement Goal Research
Achievement Values
advanced self-regulated learning techniques
Attributional Beliefs
Attributional Feedback
Category=JMR
Category=JNC
classroom intervention
cognitive development
Defensive Pessimism
Differential Long Term Consequences
Early Elementary School Age Children
educational psychology
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Good Information Processor
Good Strategy User
GPA
Grade Point Average
High School GPA
learning strategies research
Metacognitive Knowledge
motivation theory
Self-regulated Learning
Self-regulated Learning Strategies
Self-regulated Reading
Self-Regulation
Self-regulatory Processes
Self-regulatory Strategies
Sociocultural
SRSD
Strategies
Student Self-regulation
Time Management Strategies
Transactional Strategies Instruction
Work Avoidant Goals

Product details

  • ISBN 9780805813357
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 1994
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In recent years, educators have become increasingly concerned with students' attempts to manage their own learning and achievement efforts through activities that influence the instigation, direction and persistence of those efforts. In 1989, Zimmerman and Schunk edited the first book devoted to this topic. They assembled key theorists offering a range of perspectives on how students self-regulate their academic functioning. One purpose of that volume was to provide theoretical direction to ongoing as well as nascent efforts to explore academic self-regulatory processes. Since that date, there has been an exponential surge in research. This second volume on academic self-regulation offers the fruits of the first generation of research. It also addresses a number of key issues that have arisen since then such as how self-regulation differs from such related constructs as motivation and metacognition, and whether students can be taught self-regulatory skills. The contributors reveal an interesting, uplifting, and at times, disturbing picture of how students grapple with the day-to-day problems of achieving in circumstances with inherent limitations and obstacles. This volume provides insight into the source of students' capabilities to surmount adversities -- the origins of their self-initiated processes designed to improve learning, motivation, and achievement.

The text is organized on the basis of a conceptual framework that analyzes academic self-regulation into four major dimensions. That model is presented in the first chapter, and key processes that influence each of these dimensions are discussed by prominent researchers in the chapters that follow. Because each chapter is written to follow a common format, this work provides a level of continuity and parsimony normally found only in authored textbooks.

Dale H. Schunk, Barry J. Zimmerman