Metacognitive Awareness and Academic Self-Regulation of HEI Students Cover Image

Metacognitive Awareness and Academic Self-Regulation of HEI Students
Metacognitive Awareness and Academic Self-Regulation of HEI Students

Author(s): Eduard Balashov, Ihor Pasicichnyk, Ruslana Kalamazh
Subject(s): Educational Psychology, Cognitive Psychology
Published by: Удружење за развој науке, инжењерства и образовања
Keywords: metacognitive awareness; academic self-regulation; learning efficiency; HEI students

Summary/Abstract: The presented manuscript has analysed the theoretical aspects of the concepts of metacognitive awareness and academic self-regulation of HEI students. A theoretical essence of the mentioned above phenomena has been theoretically studied. The role and importance of metacognitive awareness and its components for the learning efficiency and academic self-regulation of HEI students have been described. It has been determined that such a metacognitive characteristic of personality as metacognitive awareness determines not only the organization of mental and behavioral processes, but also relates to the academic success of the subject of learning activity - student. The results of empirical research with the use of Questionnaire “Academic Self-Regulation” by R. Ryan & D. Connell, Questionnaire “Metacognitive Awareness Inventory” by D. Everson & S. Tobias, G. Schraw & R. Dennison’s questionnaire “Metacognitive awareness”, and correlation analysis with the use of the Pearson’s and Spearmen’s rank correlation coefficients, have proved that students with a high level of metacognitive awareness (involvement in activities) have high performance on the basis of identified and internal self-regulated learning activities. The students of this type are more autonomous in conducting their self-regulated learning activities, developing their metacognitive abilities, such as metacognitive knowledge, metacognitive monitoring, metamemory and meta-thinking. Summarizing the results of theoretical analysis and the empirical data evaluation, we can conclude that the learning behavior of modern student youth has been dominated by dependent types of self-regulation.

  • Issue Year: 9/2021
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 161-172
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: English