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A social cognitive view of self-regulated academic learning.
3.4K
Citations
48
References
1989
Year
Educational PsychologyEducationSocial SciencesPsychologyTeacher EducationStudent MotivationReciprocal CausalitySelf-efficacy TheoryStudent LearningLearning PsychologySocial Cognitive ViewBehavioral SciencesLearning SciencesMotivationAcademic Self-efficacy BeliefsHigher EducationSelf-regulationSelf-efficacyAchievement MotivationAcademic AchievementSelf-regulated Learning
Researchers interested in academic self-regulated learning have begun to study processes that students use to initiate and direct their efforts to acquire knowledge and skill. The social cognitive conception of self-regulated learning presented here involves a triadic analysis of component processes and an assumption of reciprocal causality among personal, behavioral, and environmental triadic influences. This theoretical account also posits a central role for the construct of academic self-efficacy beliefs and three self-regulatory processes: self-observation, self-judgment, and self-reactions. Research support for this social cognitive formulation is discussed, as is its usefulness for improving student learning and academic achievement.
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