Academic self-regulation, the process through which individuals become proactive seekers, generators, and processors of information, is widely acknowledged as the means by which students transform their mental abilities into academic skills. Self-regulated students stand out from their classmates by the goals they set for themselves, the accuracy of their behavioral self-monitoring, and the resourcefulness of their strategic thinking. This highly practical text brings together leading educators and practitioners to illuminate how self-regulatory skills can effectively be taught to elementary through college-age students in the classroom and other learning settings. Chapters present a range of interventions integrating self-regulation instruction into the regular curriculum, describing each project in depth and evaluating how well it helped students acquire self-regulation principles, apply them to enhance learning, and maintain them over time.
This book is essential reading for all educators who teach in learning settings from kindergarten through college. As the third volume in a trilogy, this volume focuses on the practical application of theoretical principles and research findings introduced in earlier volumes. Self-regulation is approached as a series of teachable skills that continue to be sharpened as students move through the curriculum. Individual chapters written by prominent educational psychologists are based on emerging data from field-tested programs. This is the only theoretically driven, research-based book available today that provides a framework for teaching students in American schools ¿how to be students. --Dale Schunk and Barry Zimmerman have done it again! --Gary D. Phye, PhD, Curriculum and Instruction, College of Education, Iowa State University
In the theory of self-regulated learning, educational psychology merges the best thinking about cognition, motivation, volition, social interaction, and expertl#