| Literature DB >> 28495934 |
Amanda J Sebesta1, Elena Bray Speth2.
Abstract
In college introductory science courses, students are challenged with mastering large amounts of disciplinary content while developing as autonomous and effective learners. Self-regulated learning (SRL) is the process of setting learning goals, monitoring progress toward them, and applying appropriate study strategies. SRL characterizes successful, "expert" learners, and develops with time and practice. In a large, undergraduate introductory biology course, we investigated: 1) what SRL strategies students reported using the most when studying for exams, 2) which strategies were associated with higher achievement and with grade improvement on exams, and 3) what study approaches students proposed to use for future exams. Higher-achieving students, and students whose exam grades improved in the first half of the semester, reported using specific cognitive and metacognitive strategies significantly more frequently than their lower-achieving peers. Lower-achieving students more frequently reported that they did not implement their planned strategies or, if they did, still did not improve their outcomes. These results suggest that many students entering introductory biology have limited knowledge of SRL strategies and/or limited ability to implement them, which can impact their achievement. Course-specific interventions that promote SRL development should be considered as integral pedagogical tools, aimed at fostering development of students' lifelong learning skills.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28495934 PMCID: PMC5459248 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-09-0269
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
FIGURE 1.The three components of self-regulated learning: metacognition, motivation, and behavior. According to Zimmerman (1989, 1990), a self-regulated learner demonstrates proactive and systematic engagement in all three components.
Survey 1, administered after exam 1, with the names of the strategies italicized and shaded in the table, on the righta
aThe names of the strategies are based on Zimmerman and Martinez-Pons (1986, 1988) and were not shown to students during the survey; they are reported here as a reference and are used throughout the manuscript to report results. Survey 2 was identical to survey 1, except where noted.
bSurvey 2: Q17. What is your grade on [course name] exam 2 (the midterm exam)? Q18. What was your grade on [course name] exam 1?
cThis question was not included in survey 2.
dSurvey 2: Q19. You answered a similar questionnaire after exam 1. At that time, you were invited to come up with a plan for how to study. Revisit your proposed study plan (you can even go back to the answer you entered). Did you follow your plan? Q20. What study strategies worked well for you in preparing for exam 2? What, if anything, did not work as well as you wished? Q21. Now, make your plan for the rest of the semester. How will you study for this course?
Rubric for coding study plans proposed by students in response to Q19 on survey 1 and Q21 on survey 2
| Category | Strategy examples—student plans to implement one or more of the following: |
|---|---|
| Self-evaluation | – Check the progress of his/her work, or generally monitor understanding of the material – Address or clarify confusions or gaps in knowledge (may also propose a specific way to address them) |
| Keeping records and monitoring; organizing and transforming | – Write or type notes when studying from the book, screencasts, lectures, or other source, in class or outside class – Mark what he/she doesn’t understand – Rearrange material/information into a format that makes learning more effective (a binder for notes, chapter outlines, note cards, study guides, etc.) – Make diagrams, summaries, highlight notes, retype/rewrite notes, combine notes from different sources, etc. |
| Goal setting and planning; time management | – Make a timeline to parse out study tasks and materials – Begin studying “earlier” or “in advance” of the exam – Keep up with assigned reading or homework – Generally spend more time studying |
| Seeking information | – Supplement information with outside resources not provided in class (e.g., YouTube videos) – Seek help; ask questions (from an unspecified source of information and/or assistance) |
| Environmental structuring | – Structure the study environment to learn more effectively, e.g., by having background music – Go to the library, find a quiet place |
| Seeking assistance from peers | – Study with friends or classmates or ask them for help |
| Seeking instructor assistance | – Seek the instructor for help when he/she doesn’t understand something – Attend office hours, ask by email, approach instructor before/after class, etc. |
| Seeking assistance from other resources | – Seek help from a TA, supplemental instruction leader, a tutor, or someone else the student sees as knowledgeable (such as family), other than classmates/friends or the instructor |
| Reviewing exams | – Practice answering available exams from previous years |
| Reviewing notes and/or course materials | – Use or review one or more of the following: his/her own class notes, note cards, flashcards, the instructor’s notes, the textbook, Tegrity screencasts, diagrams and figures, etc., as they study (the material must be specified) |
| Reviewing graded work | – Review his/her own graded work (e.g., homework, quizzes, clicker questions, or even graded exams) – Practice answering assignments again |
| Better aimed efforts (quality) | – Put forth improved effort in studying, whether it’s giving studying more priority, being more thorough/careful/selective while studying or in using a particular strategy, being more focused, increasing diligence, redirecting efforts in how or what they study, etc. (overall, expressing a concern with quality, not quantity of study) |
| More generic effort (quantity) | – Study “more” or “harder” (no specific details provided) |
| Same as before (no change) | – Do what he/she did for this past exam to some degree (e.g., “continue” or “keep on”) |
Frequency with which students who earned different grades on exams reported using each of the 15 SRL study strategies often/very often (higher use)a
aThe χ² value from the contingency analysis is reported for each strategy (df = 3; α = 0.05). Strategies having a significant association with exam grade are shaded; boldfaced χ² values indicate statistical significance. Boldfaced strategies marked with an asterisk were significantly associated with higher achievement on both exams.
Most commonly reported strategy categories students indicated on survey 1 when asked how they planned to study to prepare for future examsa
| Proposed strategy | A ( | B ( | C ( | D/F ( |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goal setting and planning; time management | 45.2% | 57.4% | 65.7% | 54.5% |
| Reviewing notes and/or course materials | 51.6% | 36.5% | 28.4% | 27.3% |
| Self-evaluation | 17.5% | 20.9% | 25.4% | 14.3% |
| Keeping records and monitoring; organizing and transforming | 23.8% | 20.9% | 26.9% | 14.3% |
| Seeking assistance from other resources (TA, SI leader, tutor, other expert) | 12.7% | 17.4% | 22.4% | 28.6% |
Students are grouped based on their self-reported exam 1 grade. The table includes only strategies that at least 25% of students within a grade group reported that they would be using in the future.
Association between self-reported use of SRL strategies and grade improvement from exam 1 to exam 2a
aPercentages indicate the proportion of students within each group who reported using each strategy with high frequency (i.e., often or very often). Sample sizes for each group are provided, along with the χ² value from the contingency analysis (df = 2; α = 0.05). Strategies having a significant association with grade improvement are noted with boldfaced font and asterisks next to the χ² values.
bReported for reference only; this group was not included in the χ² analyses.
FIGURE 2.Proportion of students reporting on survey 2 (Q19) whether they had followed their study plans, grouped based on whether their exam grade improved, decreased, or did not change. The asterisk (*) by the group of students who increased their grade to A/B/C denotes that one student did not answer this question.
Proportion of students reporting they intended to continue using the same strategies to prepare for future exams (i.e., did not plan to make any changes), shown by exam grade and in aggregate
| Survey 1 | Survey 2 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Exam grade | Percentage of students who will continue with same strategies after exam 1 | Percentage of students who will continue with same strategies after exam 2 | ||
| A | 126 | 46.8 | 107 | 68.2 |
| B | 115 | 18.3 | 115 | 40.0 |
| C | 67 | 4.5 | 77 | 19.5 |
| D/F | 77 | 1.3 | 84 | 13.1 |
| All students | 385 | 21.8 | 383 | 37.9 |