Educational psychology has generated a prolific array of findings about factors that influence and correlate with academic achievement. We review select findings from this voluminous literature and identify two domains of psychology: heuristics that describe generic relations between instructional designs and learning, which we call the psychology of “the way things are,” and findings about metacognition and self-regulated learning that demonstrate learners selectively apply and change their use of those heuristics, which we call the psychology of “the way learners make things.” Distinguishing these domains highlights a need to marry two approaches to research methodology: the classical approach, which we describe as snapshot, bookend, between-group experimentation; and a microgenetic approach that traces proximal cause-effect bonds over time to validate theoretical accounts of how learning generates achievements. We argue for fusing these methods to advance a validated psychology of academic achievement.
Goal Theory, Motivation, and School Achievement: An Integrative Review | |
| Martin V. Covington | |
| Annual Review of Psychology.
Volume 51,
Page 171-200,
2000 | |
| Abstract | Full Text | PDF (117 KB) |
Classroom Goal Structure, Student Motivation, and Academic Achievement | |
| Judith L. Meece, Eric M. Anderman, Lynley H. Anderman | |
| Annual Review of Psychology.
Volume 57,
Page 487-503,
2006 | |
| Abstract | Full Text | PDF (107 KB) |
Relativity of Remembering: Why the Laws of Memory Vanished | |
| Henry L. Roediger, III | |
| Annual Review of Psychology.
Volume 59,
Page 225-254,
2008 | |
| Abstract | Full Text | PDF (338 KB) |
| This review | |
|---|---|
| The Psychology of Academic Achievement | |
| Philip H. Winne, John C. Nesbit | |
| Annual Review of Psychology.
Volume 61,
Page 653-678,
2010 | |
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