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Natalia Andreassen; Rune Elvegård; Rune Villanger; Bjørn Helge Johnsen – Learning Organization, 2025
Purpose: Evaluating emergency preparedness exercises is crucial for assessing enhanced knowledge, facilitating learning and implementing knowledge in organizations. The cognitive process of motivation for action is a precursor for action, coping behavior and individual learning. This study aims to focus on how guided evaluation of emergency…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Emergency Programs, Motivation, Readiness
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Beaudoin, Marine; Desrichard, Olivier – Psychological Bulletin, 2011
The association between memory self-efficacy (MSE) and memory performance is highly documented in the literature. However, previous studies have produced inconsistent results, and there is no consensus on the existence of a significant link between these two variables. In order to evaluate whether or not the effect size of the MSE-memory…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Self Efficacy, Meta Analysis, Memory
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Breso, Edgar; Schaufeli, Wilmar; Salanova, Marisa – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2011
Using the Social Cognitive Theory as a theoretical framework, this study evaluated a 4-month, individual cognitive-behavioral intervention program to decrease burnout and increase self-efficacy, engagement, and performance among university students. The main objective of the intervention was to decrease the anxiety the students coped with before…
Descriptors: College Students, Burnout, Self Efficacy, Learner Engagement
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Hewitt, Allan – British Journal of Music Education, 2009
One hundred and sixty-five undergraduate music students studying in Scotland completed a 30-statement Q-sort to describe their self- and task-theories of musical performance. Statements reflected the importance of effort, confidence, technical ability, significant others and luck/chance in determining a successful performance. The Q-sorts were…
Descriptors: Music Education, Age, Musicians, Foreign Countries
Schunk, Dale H. – 1994
Self-regulation refers to the process whereby students activate and sustain cognitions, behaviors, and affects, which are systematically oriented toward attainment of goals. Effective self-regulation requires that students have goals and the motivation to attain them, and make attributions (beliefs about the causes of outcomes) that enhance…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Attribution Theory, Beliefs, Correlation