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Afnan Khoury-Metanis; Asaid Khateb – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2024
Fine motor skills (FMS) are among the most studied nonlinguistic factors influencing early literacy acquisition. Although developmental studies have often supported the presence of a relationship between FMS and emergent literacy, the underlying mechanisms have not always been adequately explored. In this study, we used structural equation…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Skills, Kindergarten, Grade 1, Spelling
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Patrick Sins; Renske de Leeuw; Jaap de Brouwer; Emmy Vrieling-Teunter – Metacognition and Learning, 2024
Self-regulated learning (SRL) is crucial to students' learning. SRL is characterized by students taking initiative, showing perseverance and adaptively regulating their learning. Teachers play an essential role in promoting and fostering this process. However, several studies have shown that in primary education explicit instruction of SRL…
Descriptors: Direct Instruction, Self Management, Learning Strategies, Faculty Development
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Ghada ElSayad – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
In student-centric learning environments, such as blended learning, students' metacognitive self-regulation is required to plan, monitor, and control their learning processes and achieve positive learning outcomes. The lack of metacognitive self-regulation may lead students to encounter difficulties that, eventually, affect their learning…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Blended Learning, Metacognition
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Nadja M. Gentner; Lisa Respondek; Tina Seufert – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2024
In learning journals, prompts were shown to increase self-regulated learning processes effectively. As studies on effects of long-term prompting are sparse, this study investigates the effects of prompting cognitive and metacognitive self-regulation strategies short-term and long-term in learning journals on learners' strategy use, self-efficacy,…
Descriptors: Prompting, Student Journals, Self Efficacy, Outcomes of Education
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Ray Tak-yin Hui; Christina Sue-Chan – Studies in Higher Education, 2024
Drawing on Bandura's (1986. "Social Foundations of Thought and Action." Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall) social cognitive theory, this study examines the relationship between peer coaching and students' learning performance, mediated by self-regulatory emotions, in a higher education setting. In a longitudinal field study, data was…
Descriptors: Self Management, Psychological Patterns, Peer Teaching, Academic Achievement
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Yanbei Wang; Liping Liu – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
The significance of higher-order thinking (HOT) is becoming increasingly prominent in the twenty-first century, as reflected in the framework of most recent competency models. Blended learning models are universally recognized as promising endeavors to promote learners' HOT in the contemporary higher education field. To ensure that such learning…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Blended Learning, Vocational Education, College Students
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Burger, Julian – Journal of Teacher Education, 2024
Mentoring is acknowledged as an essential prerequisite for successful teacher induction, but its effectiveness may vary depending on the mentor's quality of support and the mentee's initial professional beliefs. Focusing on novice teachers' self-efficacy and emotional management, this longitudinal study investigates how constructivist- and…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Mentors, Teacher Attitudes, Self Efficacy
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Peta Stapleton; Joseph Dispenza; Angela Douglas; Van Dao; Sarah Kewin; Kyra Le Sech; Anitha Vasudevan – Psychology in the Schools, 2024
This study aimed to understand how mindfulness meditation affects young people by examining its impact on self-regulation, happiness, emotional awareness, and school performance among two groups of school children. A 10-week mindfulness program was conducted by a meditation expert for 552 children aged 4-8 (Group 1) and 287 children aged 9-11…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Metacognition, Young Children, Preadolescents
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Mary Squillace; Alex Lopez; Kerri Cohn – Journal of Occupational Therapy, Schools & Early Intervention, 2024
Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) presents with a variety of symptoms. More common symptoms present as sensory processing disturbances, social communication, behavioral issues, and motor impairments. This study aimed to determine if the Safe and Sound Listening Protocol© used to accompany occupational therapy intervention is an effective approach to…
Descriptors: Children, Autism Spectrum Disorders, Listening Skills, Outcome Measures
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Kristi Bright; Jane S. Vogler – Online Learning, 2024
Undergraduate enrollment in online courses has been trending upward over the past decade, despite declining enrollment overall. With the onset of COVID-19 during the Spring 2020 semester, more undergraduates were suddenly thrust into online courses. Although learning outcomes for face-to-face and online courses may not differ, some students may…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, In Person Learning, Student Attitudes, Preferences
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Desheng Yan; Guangming Li – Interactive Learning Environments, 2024
Smart education, with its intelligent, individualized, and technologized content, represents people's lofty expectations for future education. It provides a good learning platform for teaching and an important environment in which students' digital learning power can be developed in the context of the information technology era. Digital learning…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Information Technology, Artificial Intelligence, Educational Environment
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Imam Setyo Nugroho; Mayang T. Afriwilda – Pegem Journal of Education and Instruction, 2024
Self-compassion is defined as a form of caring for yourself when facing various problems that occur in life and having the belief that failure, mistakes, suffering, and deficiencies are part of life. This article aims to explore the level of self-compassion, gender differences, age differences on the level of self-compassion of students with…
Descriptors: Caring, Beliefs, Self Management, Gender Differences
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Eliot Hazeltine; Iring Koch; Daniel H. Weissman – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2024
Responses are slower in two-choice tasks when either a previous stimulus feature or the previous response repeats than when all features repeat or all features change. Current views of action control posit that such partial repetition costs (PRCs) index the time to update a prior "binding" between a stimulus feature and the response or…
Descriptors: College Students, Psychological Studies, Neurosciences, Memory
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Aylin Sop – Southeast Asia Early Childhood, 2024
The present study examined the mediating role of self-regulation in the relationship between preschool children's anxiety and life skills. Children's anxiety, self-regulation, and life skills were assessed using the "Children's Anxiety Scale-Mothers' Form," "The Self-Regulation Skills Scale for Children aged 4 to 6 (Mothers'…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Anxiety, Daily Living Skills
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Zahra Atiq; Rakhi Batra – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2024
Emotions are a complex multi-faceted phenomenon. To assess the complexity of emotions from different facets, multi-modal approaches are necessary. However, multi-modal approaches are rarely used for assessing emotions, especially in the context of computer programming. This study adopts a multi-modal approach to understand the changes in students'…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Change, Programming, Problem Solving
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