4.4 Article

Metacognitive monitoring and control in elementary school children: Their interrelations and their role for test performance

Journal

LEARNING AND INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES
Volume 29, Issue -, Pages 141-149

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lindif.2012.12.003

Keywords

Metacognition; Monitoring; Control; Mastery motivation; Achievement; Elementary school children

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Contemporary models of self-regulated learning emphasize the role of distal motivational factors for student's achievement, on the one side, and the proximal role of metacognitive monitoring and control for learning and test outcomes, on the other side. In the present study, two larger samples of elementary school children (9- and 11-year-olds) were included and their mastery-oriented motivation, metacognitive monitoring and control skills were integrated into structural equation models testing and comparing the relative impact of these different constituents for self-regulated learning. For one, results indicate that the factorial structure of monitoring, control and mastery motivation was invariant across the two age groups. Of specific interest was the finding that there were age-dependent structural links between monitoring, control, and test performance (closer links in the older compared to the younger children), with high confidence yielding a direct and positive effect on test performance and a direct and negative effect on adequate control behavior in the achievement test. Mastery-oriented motivation was not found to be substantially associated with monitoring (confidence), control (detection and correction of errors), or test performance underlining the importance of proximal, metacognitive factors for test performance in elementary school children. (C) 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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