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Development of a Structured Interview for Assessing Student Use of Self-Regulated Learning Strategies
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1986
Year
Structured InterviewEducational PsychologyEducationAssessing Student UseLearning-by-doingPsychologySelf-efficacy TheoryStudent MotivationStudent LearningSelf-regulated Learning StrategiesSuburban High SchoolAchievement GoalSocial SkillsSchool PsychologyLearning SciencesSelf-regulation StrategiesEducational LeadershipEducational StatisticsAdolescent LearningSelf-regulationSecondary EducationEducational AssessmentHigh Achievement TrackAchievement MotivationSelf-regulated Learning
Forty male and female l0th-grade students from a high achievement track and 40 from other (lower) achievement tracks of a suburban high school were interviewed concerning their use of self-regulated learning strategies during class, homework, and study. Fourteen categories of self-regulation strategies were identified from student answers that dealt with six learning contexts. High achieving students displayed significantly greater use of 13 categories of self-regulated learning. The students’ membership in their respective achievement group was predicted with 93% accuracy using their reports of self-regulated learning. When compared to students’ gender and socioeconomic status indices in regression analyses, self-regulated learning measures proved to be the best predictor of standardized achievement test scores. The results were discussed in terms of a social learning view of self-regulated learning.