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Situated Self-Regulation: Modeling the Interrelationships Among Instruction, Assessment, Learning Strategies and Academic Performance
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2003
Year
Performance StudiesStudent AssessmentStudent LearningAcademic PerformanceLearning SciencesCourse InformationEducational PsychologyLearning StrategiesEducationStudent-centered LearningEducational ContextEducational AssessmentLearning EnvironmentHigher EducationLearning ContextSelf-regulated LearningLong Term
To succeed academically, college students must actively construct course information, synthesize this information with information from texts and other resources, understand this information so that they can succeed on various forms of assessments and ultimately retain this information for the long term. While the complexity of these demands has been modeled somewhat metaphorically, there has been little ecologically valid research into learning in authentic classroom contexts. The present study examines the interrelationships among student perceptions of the learning context, test complexity, study strategies, and academic performance. Results of a path analysis demonstrated that perceptions of the teaching format and test complexity were positively related to the study strategies reported, and these study strategies were further related to the reported course performance.