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Showing 1 to 15 of 49 results Save | Export
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Ingrid P. Hernandez Sibo; David A. Gomez Celis; Shyhnan Liou – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Creative thinking, recognized as a fundamental life skill, is a complex process influenced by cognitive load. While literature has addressed the integration of cognitive load theory into creative thinking research, a comprehensive synthesis is lacking. To address this gap, we conducted a systematic review and deductive thematic analysis, drawing…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Creative Thinking, Creativity
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Tina Seufert; Verena Hamm; Andrea Vogt; Valentin Riemer – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Self-regulated learning depends on task difficulty and on learners' resources and cognitive load, as described by an inverted U-shaped relationship in Seufert's (2018) model: for easy tasks, resources are high and load is low, so there is no need to regulate, whereas for difficult tasks, load is too high and resources are too low to regulate. Only…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Resources, Self Management
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Anastasia Efklides; Bennett L. Schwartz – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Efklides and colleagues developed the Metacognitive and Affective model of Self-Regulated Learning (MASRL) to provide a comprehensive theoretical framework of self-regulated learning (SRL). The distinguishing feature of MASRL is that it stresses metacognitive experiences and other subjective experiences (e.g., motivational, affective) as critical…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Self Management, Learning Strategies, Models
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Badali, Sabrina; Rawson, Katherine A.; Dunlosky, John – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
Multiple-choice practice tests are beneficial for learning, and students encounter multiple-choice questions regularly. How do students regulate their use of multiple-choice practice testing? And, how effective is students' use of multiple-choice practice testing? In the current experiments, undergraduate participants practiced German-English word…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Drills (Practice), Multiple Choice Tests, Student Behavior
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Joachim Wirth; Xenia-Lea Weber-Reuter; Corinna Schuster; Jens Fleischer; Detlev Leutner; Ferdinand Stebner – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Training of self-regulated learning is most effective if it supports learning strategies in combination with metacognitive regulation, and learners can transfer their acquired metacognitive regulation skills to different tasks that require the use of the same learning strategy (near transfer). However, whether learners can transfer metacognitive…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 6, Grade 5, Metacognition
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Yael Sidi; Rakefet Ackerman – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
When faced with challenging thinking tasks accompanied by a feeling of uncertainty, people often prefer to opt out (e.g., replying "I don't know", seeking advice) over giving low-confidence responses. In professions with high-stakes decisions (e.g., judges, medical practitioners), opting out is generally seen as preferable to making…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Decision Making, Metacognition, Knowledge Management
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Soderstrom, Nicholas C.; Bjork, Elizabeth Ligon – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
The current study examined whether the learning benefits of pretesting--like those produced by posttesting--generalize to classroom settings, and whether such benefits transfer to non-pretested related information. Before some lectures but not others, undergraduate students enrolled in a large research methods class were given a brief competitive…
Descriptors: Pretesting, Academic Achievement, Undergraduate Students, Research Methodology
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García, Agustín J.; Fong, Carlton J.; Regalado, Yvette M. – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
In the USA, over 600,000 student-athletes participate in nationally organized intercollegiate sports and occupy socially prominent spaces on college campuses. Although their athletic accomplishments often garner much attention, there is growing interest in collegiate student-athletes' academic achievement and its precursors. One set of factors…
Descriptors: Student Athletes, College Students, College Athletics, Student Motivation
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Kim, Yeo-eun; Zepeda, Cristina D.; Butler, Andrew C. – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
Understanding how students self-regulate their learning experiences has been at the forefront of many empirical and theoretical advances in both cognitive and educational psychology. Yet, these two fields have traditionally investigated this multifaceted aspect of learning using different approaches, resulting in scientific knowledge that is…
Descriptors: Self Management, Student Behavior, Learning Experience, Educational Theories
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Seufert, Tina – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
Building bridges between two of the most influential research fields in educational psychology, self-regulation and cognitive load theory, is highly relevant but also challenging. The collection of papers in this special issue reflects this interplay by reviewing the still scarce base of empirical data in an impressively elaborated and profound…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Difficulty Level, Self Management, Educational Psychology
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Dunlosky, John; Badali, Sabrina; Rivers, Michelle L.; Rawson, Katherine A. – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
Almost anything worth doing takes effort, so it is no surprise that effort has played such a central role in how researchers, theoreticians, instructors, and even students think about student learning and achievement. In this special issue, the authors of the target articles explore the importance of effort to students' self-regulated learning…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Achievement Gains, Individual Power, Student Attitudes
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Panadero, Ernesto; Jonsson, Anders; Pinedo, Leire; Fernández-Castilla, Belén – Educational Psychology Review, 2023
Rubrics are widely used as instructional and learning instrument. Though they have been claimed to have positive effects on students' learning, these effects have not been meta-analyzed. Our aim was to synthesize the effects of rubrics on academic performance, self-regulated learning, and self-efficacy. The moderator effect of the following…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Academic Achievement, Self Management, Learning Strategies
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Dignath, Charlotte; Veenman, Marcel V. J. – Educational Psychology Review, 2021
Despite the consensus about the importance of self-regulated learning for academic as well as for lifelong learning, it is still poorly understood as to how teachers can most effectively support their students in enacting self-regulated learning. This article provides a framework about how self-regulated learning can be activated directly through…
Descriptors: Direct Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness, Self Management, Classroom Observation Techniques
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van Gog, Tamara; Hoogerheide, Vincent; van Harsel, Milou – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
Problem-solving tasks form the backbone of STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) curricula. Yet, how to improve self-monitoring and self-regulation when learning to solve problems has received relatively little attention in the self-regulated learning literature (as compared with, for instance, learning lists of items or…
Descriptors: Problem Solving, STEM Education, Self Management, Cognitive Processes
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van de Pol, Janneke; van Loon, Mariëtte; van Gog, Tamara; Braumann, Sophia; de Bruin, Anique – Educational Psychology Review, 2020
For (facilitating) effective learning from texts, students and teachers need to accurately monitor students' comprehension. Monitoring judgments are accurate when they correspond to students' actual comprehension. Accurate monitoring enables accurate (self-)regulation of the learning process, i.e., making study decisions that are in line with…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Drafting, Self Management, Reader Text Relationship
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