| Literature DB >> 19575616 |
Philip H Winne1, John C Nesbit.
Abstract
Educational psychology has generated a prolific array of findings about factors that influence and correlate with academic achievement. We review select findings from this voluminous literature and identify two domains of psychology: heuristics that describe generic relations between instructional designs and learning, which we call the psychology of "the way things are," and findings about metacognition and self-regulated learning that demonstrate learners selectively apply and change their use of those heuristics, which we call the psychology of "the way learners make things." Distinguishing these domains highlights a need to marry two approaches to research methodology: the classical approach, which we describe as snapshot, bookend, between-group experimentation; and a microgenetic approach that traces proximal cause-effect bonds over time to validate theoretical accounts of how learning generates achievements. We argue for fusing these methods to advance a validated psychology of academic achievement.Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 19575616 DOI: 10.1146/annurev.psych.093008.100348
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Annu Rev Psychol ISSN: 0066-4308 Impact factor: 24.137