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The importance and significance of self-regulation of learning has emerged as one of the most important development for explaining motivation and performance among learners. Self-regulation of learning refers to the process in which learners' self-initiate thoughts, behavior, and feelings in order to pursue valuable academic goals. Self-regulation of learning involves three cyclical phases. During the forethought phase, learners, as proactive agents, engage in self-generating goals, strategic planning, intrinsic interest on tasks, and sustain self-efficacy beliefs. During the performance phase, learners initiate actions by which they enact volitional control and use strategies such self-instruction, imagery, self-monitoring, and attention control. During the self-reflective phase, learners initiate self-reflective processes in which they self-evaluate their performance, examine their attributions and self-reactions, and adapt their performance. Self-regulation of learning approaches investigate the contextual, environmental, and social cognitive factors that guide and promote learning.
This special issue of Academic Exchange Quarterly features empirical and theoretical contributions dealing with improving students' self-regulation of learning. This special issue of shows the many ways in which the cyclical phases and subprocesses of self-regulation of learning are currently taking place in multiple settings and learning conditions. With an emphasis on the forethought phase, this issue describes the processes and beliefs associated with knowledge about requirements of one's future goals and willingness to regulate actions to achieve those goals during the transition to adulthood (Owens & Schneider) and shared concepts of students' autonomy, intrinsic motivation, and goal orientation in the teacher-student relationships ...
Source: HighBeam Research, Self-regulation of learning.(Editorial)