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Zawilinski, Lisa – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2022
This chapter examines specific Universal Design for Learning (UDL) principles, guidelines, and checkpoints that support the removal of barriers to reading to learn efforts. The chapter will also offer practical examples of relevant curricular moves to support student learning from texts.
Descriptors: Access to Education, College Students, Teaching Methods, Barriers
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Karabenick, Stuart A.; Dembo, Myron H. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Help seeking is an important developmental skill, a form of behavioral, or social, self-regulation employed by cognitively, behaviorally, and emotionally engaged learners. Help seeking is unique among learning strategies as it may imply that learners are incapable of task completion or satisfactory performance without assistance, which can be…
Descriptors: Help Seeking, Learning Strategies, Metacognition, College Students
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Bembenutty, Hefer – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
The ability to delay gratification is the cornerstone of all academic achievement and education. It is by delaying gratification that learners can pursue long-term academic and career goals. In general, "delay of gratification" refers to an individual's ability to forgo immediate rewards for the sake of more valuable ones later (Mischel, 1996).…
Descriptors: Delay of Gratification, Academic Achievement, College Students, Student Motivation
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Lichtinger, Einat; Kaplan, Avi – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
"Academic self-regulation" refers to the self-generated, reflective, and strategic engagement in academic tasks (Zimmerman, 2000). Self-regulation is crucial for academic success, particularly in higher education, where students are required to take increased responsibility for their learning and where the diversity of courses and activities may…
Descriptors: College Students, Metacognition, Learning Strategies, Academic Achievement
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Svinicki, Marilla D. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2010
In 1995 when "New Directions" issue No. 63, "Understanding Self-Regulated Learning," was published, the issue editor, Paul Pintrich, was one of the leaders in studying how college students learn and what helps or hinders them during the process. His contributions to the field have been tremendous and very significant both theoretically and…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Learning Processes, Learning Strategies, Teaching Methods
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Bembenutty, Hefer – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
This chapter highlights the major contributions of this volume on self-regulation of learning and provides new directions for cutting-edge theoretical and empirical work that could serve to facilitate self-regulation of learning in postsecondary education. "Self-regulation of learning" refers to learners' beliefs about their ability to engage in…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Learning, Self Control, Self Efficacy
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Pintrich, Paul R. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1988
Current research on college students' knowledge, learning strategies, and critical thinking gives a better picture of the complexity of the learning process and can be used by faculty to improve interactions with individual students in different settings. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Critical Thinking, Educational Change
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Pintrich, Paul R.; Johnson, Glenn Ross – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1990
These authors describe how current cognitive theory has produced two instruments for instructors to use in determining the skill levels and study strategies that dominate their students' approaches to classroom materials. The two instruments are the Learning and Study Strategies Inventory (LASSI) and the Motivated Strategies for Learning…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, College Instruction
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Entwistle, Noel; Tait, Hilary – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Drawing on a number of studies of college student learning, this review concludes that students in different disciplines develop characteristic ways of learning based on their perceptions of what is required in their academic work. Within a discipline, effective learning involves an interplay between the characteristics of the student and the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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Pintrich, Paul R. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Self-regulated learning is an important component of learning for college students. Students must have greater awareness of their own behavior, motivation, and cognition and of positive motivational beliefs, and must practice self-regulated learning strategies. Faculty can model self-regulated learning and provide appropriate classroom tasks. (MSE)
Descriptors: Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, College Faculty