Exploring the relations between teachers’ cue-utilization, monitoring and regulation of students’ text learning

Janneke van de Pol*, Selia N. van den Boom-Muilenburg, Tamara van Gog

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This study investigated teachers’ monitoring and regulation of students’ learning from texts. According to the cue-utilization framework (Koriat, in Journal of Experimental Psychology, 126, 349–370, 1997), monitoring accuracy depends on how predictive the information (or cues) that teachers use to make monitoring judgments actually is for students’ performance. Accurate monitoring of students’ comprehension is considered a precondition for adaptive regulation of students’ learning. However, these assumptions have not yet been directly investigated. We therefore examined teachers’ cue-utilization and how it affects their monitoring and regulation accuracy. In a within-subjects design, 21 secondary education teachers made monitoring judgments and regulation decisions for fifteen students under three cue-availability conditions: 1) only student cues (i.e., student’s name), 2) only performance cues (i.e., diagrams students completed about texts they had read), and 3) both student and performance cues (i.e., student’s name and completed diagram). Teachers’ absolute and relative monitoring accuracy was higher when having student cues available in addition to diagram cues. Teachers’ relative regulation accuracy was higher when having only performance cues available instead of only student cues (as indicated by a direct effect). Monitoring accuracy predicted regulation accuracy and in addition to a direct effect, we also found and indirect effect of cue-availability on regulation accuracy (via monitoring accuracy). These results suggest that accurate regulation can be brought about both indirectly by having accurate monitoring judgments and directly by cue-utilization. The findings of this study can help to refine models of teacher monitoring and regulation and can be useful in designing effective interventions to promote teachers’ monitoring and regulation.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)769-799
Number of pages31
JournalMetacognition and Learning
Volume16
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2021

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
During the realization of part of this research the first author was funded by a Veni grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research awarded to the first author (grant number: 451–16-012).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).

Funding

During the realization of part of this research the first author was funded by a Veni grant from the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research awarded to the first author (grant number: 451–16-012).

Keywords

  • Adaptive regulation
  • Metacomprehension accuracy
  • Teacher judgment accuracy
  • Teacher monitoring
  • Teacher regulation
  • Text comprehension

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