Phan Huy P, Ngu Bing H, McQueen Kelvin
School of Education, University of New England, Armidale, NSW, Australia.
Front Psychol. 2020 Jun 3;11:1037. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01037. eCollection 2020.
is an interesting concept. For some cultural groups, time is an entity that exists only in the here and now, whereas for others it can be linear, emphasizing a person's past, present, and future. Many of us, while living in the "present moment," may also anticipate and project future goals, dreams, hopes, and ambitions. Indeed, from a positive point of view, future orientations are healthy and may direct one's focus, instill motivation and persistence, and mobilize the expenditure of effort. Existing research has provided empirical evidence to support the promotion and encouragement of a positive . From an educational point of view, the study of time may be useful for calculating achievement, given that a student may use future time orientation to guide and direct his/her academic and/or non-academic future. One notable question for consideration, in this case, relates to the - that is, how far into the future should one project? There may be a significant difference between, say, a timespan that scopes a 6-month period as opposed to a timespan that scopes a 2-year period. By the same token, over the past few years we have delved into an interesting line of inquiry, namely, the - for example, what facilitates and/or causes a person to achieve an optimal level of best practice in particular subject matter? Our theory of human optimization, consolidated and recently published in , provides an in-depth theoretical account of an underlying process, which we postulate could help explain the achievement of optimal best. Optimization, in this case, is intimately linked to a person's achievement of optimal best. We rationalize that within the context of academic learning, cognitive complexity of particular subject matter could serve as an important source of motivation in the anticipation and projection a student's extended future timespan. In this analysis, the extremely complex nature of a learning task or a suite of tasks may compel a student to consider a longer future timespan for successful completion. We also argue, in contrast, that the specific duration of a future timespan (for e.g., 6 months vs. 2 years) could play a significant role in the successful optimization of a student's state of cognitive functioning.
这是一个有趣的概念。对于一些文化群体来说,时间是一种仅存在于此时此地的实体,而对于另一些文化群体而言,时间可能是线性的,强调一个人的过去、现在和未来。我们许多人在生活在“当下”的同时,也可能会预期并规划未来的目标、梦想、希望和抱负。事实上,从积极的角度来看,未来导向是健康的,可能会引导一个人的注意力,灌输动力和毅力,并促使付出努力。现有研究已经提供了实证证据来支持对积极的促进和鼓励。从教育的角度来看,鉴于学生可能会利用未来时间导向来指导和规划他/她的学术和/或非学术未来,对时间的研究可能有助于计算成就。在这种情况下,一个值得考虑的显著问题与——也就是说,一个人应该规划到多远的未来?例如,涵盖6个月时间段的时间跨度与涵盖2年时间段的时间跨度之间可能存在显著差异。同样,在过去几年里,我们深入研究了一条有趣的探究路线,即——例如,是什么促进和/或导致一个人在特定主题上达到最佳实践的最佳水平?我们的人类优化理论,经过整理并最近发表在 ,提供了一个关于潜在过程的深入理论阐述,我们假设这可以帮助解释最佳状态的实现。在这种情况下,优化与一个人达到最佳状态密切相关。我们认为,在学术学习的背景下,特定主题的认知复杂性可能是在预期和规划学生更长的未来时间跨度时的一个重要动机来源。在这种分析中,一项学习任务或一组任务的极其复杂的性质可能会促使学生考虑更长的未来时间跨度以成功完成。相比之下,我们还认为,未来时间跨度的具体时长(例如,6个月与2年)可能在学生认知功能状态的成功优化中发挥重要作用。