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Norton, Linda S.; Hartley, James – Higher Education, 1986
A study of college student study skills and note sources and their relationship to test performance found that the more sources students used, the higher their test scores would be. In addition, students made choices about the sources they use, and some choices led to higher scores, especially those reflectng scorer. (MSE)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Notetaking, Scores, Scoring
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Vermunt, Jan D. H. M.; Van Rijswijk, Frank A. W. M. – Higher Education, 1988
The relationships between the components of self-regulated learning are investigated, as well as relationships between those components and variables such as educational experience and students' learning styles. A Study Advisory Packet was evaluated. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Cognitive Style, Higher Education, Independent Study
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Cloete, Nico; Schochet, Ian – Higher Education, 1986
The content and approach of study skills courses are critiqued and alternatives are suggested. It is proposed that an approach providing students with knowledge about the cognitive processes involved in mastering complex material would make the study skills teacher an agent of social change aiming for the enlightenment and emancipation of students…
Descriptors: Behaviorism, Change Agents, Cognitive Processes, Comparative Analysis
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Meyer, J. H. F. – Higher Education, 1991
The concept of study orchestration, a contextualized approach to study skills/habits for individuals and groups of students, is discussed as it relates to college student learning. Individual differences and characteristics are considered, particularly as they are sensitive to study context and concern intervention for students at risk…
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, High Risk Students, Higher Education
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Hounsell, Dai – Higher Education, 1979
Current approaches to helping students learn, chiefly in Britain and involving groups rather than individuals, are reviewed and related to research on learning. Four issues are explored: learning and studying; problems of subject and context; change, autonomy and the learner; and the relationship between research and development. (Author/JMD)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Foreign Countries, Group Instruction, Higher Education
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Thomas, John W.; And Others – Higher Education, 1991
Research on college students' study skills and habits and on secondary-level course organization suggest certain patterns of instructor demand (workload, test difficulty, latitude for self-direction) and compensations (test review practices, test item overlap with instructor handouts, "safety nets") may account for student study deficiencies, and…
Descriptors: College Preparation, College Students, Course Organization, High School Graduates
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Entwistle, N. J.; And Others – Higher Education, 1991
Data describing college students' study orientations in relation to their evaluations of courses and preferences for different kinds of learning environment are reexamined in light of recent suggestions that failing students perceive their learning context atypically. Implications of this disintegration of coherent perception patterns are examined…
Descriptors: Academic Failure, College Students, Educational Attitudes, Higher Education
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Prosser, Michael; Trigwell, Keith – Higher Education, 1990
A study of 11 courses in 2 institutions (n=999 students) indicates that courses and teaching in which students have adopted deeper strategies for learning also have higher student ratings, supporting, in general, the validity of student ratings. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: College Students, Course Evaluation, Higher Education, Learning Strategies
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Elshout-Mohr, M. – Higher Education, 1983
The approach of Center for Research into Higher Education study skill group sees study skills as answers to characteristic demands of study tasks and study skills training as helping students provide more adequate answers. Directions for both research and practical activities of the group are discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Organization, Educational Research, Foreign Countries
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Sobral, Dejano T. – Higher Education, 1997
A self-help approach used to enhance medical students' self-directed learning (SDL) skills in an elective course resulted in increased student feelings of self-efficacy, and the self-ratings had significant relationships to measures of deep approach to study. Academic achievement was higher for this group than for controls. Some conditions…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cooperative Learning, Elective Courses, Higher Education
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Eley, Malcolm G. – Higher Education, 1992
Monash University (Australia) students (n=320) enrolled concurrently in two courses were surveyed concerning their approaches to learning and the classroom presentation of material. Results supported the conception that an individual student's approach to studying in a course is determined in part by his perceptions of the teaching approach. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Style, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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Richardson, John T. E. – Higher Education, 1994
Analysis of literature concerning approaches to studying in higher education suggests that these vary systematically from one culture to another. Two common orientations are distinguished: comprehension of meaning of learning materials, and reproduction of them. The former is consistent and coherent, the latter fragmented and variable according to…
Descriptors: College Students, Cultural Context, Cultural Differences, Cultural Traits
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Entwistle, Noel; And Others – Higher Education, 1987
The development and application of a computer adventure game simulating the college experience for college-bound students are described. The game is intended to provide both a realistic role preview for prospective students and experience with computer interaction. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: College Bound Students, College Environment, Computer Oriented Programs, Counseling
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Janssen, P. J. – Higher Education, 1996
Studaxology is a theory that explains to the college student how to become organized within the study environment, based on what the student experiences while studying. Its core is a 3x3 matrix of study experiences. Interpretation of the matrix enables the student to meet deep-level learning demands for optimal functioning in higher education.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Independent Study, Individual Differences
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Meyer, J. H. F. – Higher Education, 1995
A survey of university freshmen investigated structural gender differences in learning behavior, based on recollections and report of science study in the final year of secondary school. It is concluded that the differences that emerged are only partially interpretable as classic deep or strategic structures and that gender-sensitive sources of…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Comparative Analysis, Females, High School Seniors
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