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Bembenutty, Hefer – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Self-regulation of learning occupies a fundamental place in postsecondary education. "Self-regulation of learning" refers to learners' beliefs about their capability to engage in appropriate actions, thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in order to pursue valuable academic goals while self-monitoring and self-reflecting on their progress toward goal…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Self Control, Self Efficacy, Student Motivation
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Randi, Judi; Corno, Lyn; Johnson, Elisabeth – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Focusing on the transition from school to work, the 21st Century Workforce Commission has recommended closer linkages between secondary schools and colleges and between colleges and the workplace as a means of motivating students toward higher personal goals linked to the world of work. In negotiating the increasingly complex demands of college…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Education Work Relationship, Self Control, Learning Strategies
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Greene, Jeffrey A.; Moos, Daniel C.; Azevedo, Roger – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Self-regulated learning (SRL) skills are enacted dynamically over the course of learning tasks, and the frequency and quality of their use can fluctuate dramatically. Further, students' SRL skills can vary from one academic domain to another and even from one task to another within a single domain. Thus, while SRL skills are essential for…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Self Control, Self Efficacy, Learning
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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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Middleton, Michael; Abrams, Eleanor; Seaman, Jayson – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Teachers who engage in reflective practices are better able to recognize the complexity of teaching, use judgment to choose appropriate strategies for teaching and learning in their specific contexts, and experience improved self-confidence. For these reasons, many teacher education programs emphasize self-reflective practice. Self-reflective…
Descriptors: Student Teaching, Reflective Teaching, Beliefs, Self Efficacy
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Cleary, Timothy J. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
The field of school psychology has undergone a significant paradigm shift in service delivery philosophy over the past decade. As part of this paradigm shift, practitioners typically are encouraged to target context-specific skills and processes that facilitate or enhance students' achievement in school rather than traditional traitlike abilities,…
Descriptors: Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, School Psychologists, Attitudes
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Kitsantas, Anastasia; Dabbagh, Nada – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Recent research shows that Web 2.0 technologies are not only shaping how college students connect to the world and each other but also are affecting their learning and performance. Additionally, some research evidence suggests that faculty can use social software tools to facilitate student self-regulated learning processes, such as goal setting,…
Descriptors: Internet, Information Technology, College Students, Learning
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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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Zimmerman, Barry J.; Paulsen, Andrew S. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Self-monitoring is an important part of self-regulated learning. While researchers agree on the overt features of self-monitoring, its psychological dimensions are disputed. Faculty can help college students learn formal, systematic techniques by teaching it in four phases: baseline, structured, independent, and self-regulated self-monitoring. A…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Faculty, Higher Education, Learning Motivation
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Weinstein, Gerald; Obear, Kathy – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1992
Handling intergroup bias issues in the college classroom may stimulate teacher anxiety but also may provide opportunities for self-understanding. Common anxieties concern confronting one's own cultural identity/attitudes, responding to biased comments, doubts about one's own competence, need for learner approval, and handling intense emotions.…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Attitude Change, Change Strategies, College Faculty
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Trawick, LaVergne; Corno, Lyn – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Research suggests urban community college students have ineffective study approaches and habits. A program teaching how to regulate behavior, cognition, and affect can be an important resource. One such program helps students monitor and control external and internal aspects of the learning environment, task and setting, others in the task…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Community Colleges, Educational Environment, Higher Education