The effects of beliefs about knowledge and learning on students' self-regulated studying

2006 
This study investigated the relationship between students' beliefs about knowledge and learning, and operations they used to study a text. Specifically, it examined the relationships among students' beliefs about knowledge and learning, their selection of learning tactics, their metacognitive processes, and achievement. Moreover, this study assessed the hierarchical structure of beliefs by investigating students' beliefs about knowledge and learning and their effect on students' learning at two levels: the general and the contextual level. Fifty undergraduate students enrolled in an introductory educational psychology course volunteered to participate in this study. Students completed the original and a contextualized version of the Epistemological Beliefs Inventory (EBI) to assess their general beliefs and their specific beliefs related to a particular area of inquiry (social psychology). Students' used gStudy, a software application that records traces of students' study tactics as they study, to study a chapter that represented different perspectives on the causes and prevention of aggression. Prior to the study session, students' verbal ability and prior knowledge about the chapter topic were tested. Following the study session, participants rated the chapter in terms of its interest, difficulty, and familiarity; and they responded to comprehension monitoring and comprehension monitoring standards surveys. Shortly after, participants wrote the
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