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Some teachers have instructed students in Self-Regulation
by adapting a Learning Academy Model (Zimmerman, Bonner, & Kovach,
1996). Learning Academies help students focus on behavior and emphasize
expert and peer modeling, direct social feedback for performance
efforts, and practice routines that involve goal-setting and self-monitoring.
A great reliance is placed on tutoring and coaching during actual
performance efforts. Students are taught to control their learning
processes with self-monitoring and self-regulation so they can learn
more with less effort by using the following steps:
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- Evaluate current level of mastery
- Analyze the learning task
- Set learning goals
- Choose appropriate strategies to master
material
- Monitor own performance
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Using this approach, teachers:
- shift the responsibility to the student
- e.g., encourage students to exercise choices about how to accomplish
learning activities; help student shift the focus of their regulation
away from the teacher and onto salient cues in the learning task
- adopt a systematic instructional approach;
a cyclic self-regulatory approach to learning
- demonstrate model (sequence is important:
student observes model, imitates, practices in structured settings,
then self-regulates by adapting to changing personal and contextual
conditions)
- demonstrate effectiveness of self-regulatory
techniques; keep records of student's progress
- use verbal persuasion; support and encouragement,
especially when student perceives that new strategies are not
working
The teaching strategies associated
with the Learning Academy Model:
- break tasks into components
- use direct assistance and explicit training
- anticipate students' questions; have clear
policy
- incorporate literary and other symbolic
forms of information (pictures, diagrams, formulas)
- link strategy use with improved performance,
i.e., maintain portfolios; video or audio tape
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