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Gaeta Gonzalez, Martha Leticia – Online Submission, 2013
In order to self-regulate their learning, students need to use different strategies to plan, monitor, and evaluate their learning activities (meta-cognitive strategies), as well as to control their motivation and emotion (volitional strategies). Students' effectiveness in their self-regulated learning process also varies depending on the academic…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Goal Orientation, Secondary School Students, Late Adolescents
Laskey, Marcia L.; Hetzel, Carole J. – Online Submission, 2010
Numerous studies have investigated the effect of metacognition and self-regulated learning on college students' achievement and retention. This study extended the research by examining the relationship between metacognition and "at-risk" student achievement and retention. Data were collected through personal interviews and the use of "The…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Metacognition, Statistical Analysis, Learning Strategies
Magno, Carlo – Online Submission, 2009
It is hypothesized in the present study that when learners are tasked to write a composition in a second language (such as English language for Filipinos), they use specific approaches to learning and eventually undergo self-regulatory processes. The present study tested a model showing the shift from process to outcome in writing (Zimmerman &…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Student Attitudes, Path Analysis, Foreign Countries
Magno, Carlo – Online Submission, 2010
The present study investigated the composition of negative affect and its function as inhibitory to thought processes such as self-regulation. Negative affect in the present study were composed of anxiety, worry, thought suppression, and fear of negative evaluation. These four factors were selected based on the criteria of negative affect by…
Descriptors: Factor Structure, Affective Behavior, Cognitive Processes, Barriers
Magno, Carlo – Online Submission, 2008
The study investigated the effect of activation and negative affect on self-regulation. The activation factors are self-determination, disengagement, initiative, and persistence while negative affect is composed of worry, anxiety, thought suppression, and fear of negative evaluation. Separate measures were used for each factor and administered to…
Descriptors: College Students, Self Management, Self Control, Inhibition