Department of Teacher Education and School Development, University of Oslo, Norway.
Br J Educ Psychol. 2011 Dec;81(Pt 4):558-78. doi: 10.1348/2044-8279.002008. Epub 2010 Nov 29.
Several studies have examined young primary school children's use of strategies when solving simple addition and subtraction problems. Most of these studies have investigated students' strategy use as if they were isolated processes. To date, we have little knowledge about how math strategies in young students are related to other important aspects in self-regulated learning.
The main purpose of this study was to examine relations between young primary school children's basic mathematical skills and their use of math strategies, their metacognitive competence and motivational beliefs, and to investigate how students with basic mathematics skills at various levels differ in respect to the different self-regulation components.
The participants were comprised of 27 Year 2 students, all from the same class.
The data were collected in three stages (autumn Year 2, spring Year 2, and autumn Year 3). The children's arithmetic skills were measured by age relevant tests, while strategy use, metacognitive competence, and motivational beliefs were assessed through individual interviews. The participants were divided into three performance groups; very good students, good students, and not-so-good students.
Analyses revealed that young primary school children at different levels of basic mathematics skill may differ in several important aspects of self-regulated learning. Analyses revealed that a good performance in addition and subtraction was related not only to the children's use of advanced mathematics strategies, but also to domain-specific metacognitive competence, ability attribution for success, effort attribution for failure, and high perceived self-efficacy when using specific strategies.
The results indicate that instructional efforts to facilitate self-regulated learning of basic arithmetic skills should address cognitive, metacognitive, and motivational aspects of self-regulation. This is particularly important for low-performing students.
多项研究考察了小学生在解决简单加减法问题时使用策略的情况。这些研究大多将学生的策略使用视为孤立的过程。迄今为止,我们对小学生的数学策略与自主学习的其他重要方面如何相关知之甚少。
本研究的主要目的是考察小学生基本数学技能与数学策略使用、元认知能力和动机信念之间的关系,并调查不同基本数学技能水平的学生在不同的自我调节成分方面有何差异。
参与者由 27 名二年级学生组成,均来自同一个班级。
数据收集分三个阶段进行(二年级秋季、二年级春季和三年级秋季)。儿童的算术技能通过与年龄相关的测试进行测量,而策略使用、元认知能力和动机信念则通过个体访谈进行评估。参与者被分为三组,分别是非常优秀的学生、优秀的学生和不太优秀的学生。
分析表明,基本数学技能水平不同的小学生在自主学习的几个重要方面可能存在差异。分析表明,加减法表现良好不仅与儿童使用高级数学策略有关,还与特定领域的元认知能力、对成功的能力归因、对失败的努力归因以及在使用特定策略时的高自我效能感有关。
结果表明,促进基本算术技能自主学习的教学努力应该涉及认知、元认知和动机方面的自我调节。对于表现不佳的学生来说,这一点尤为重要。