Exploring the Effects of Metacognitive Prompts on Learning Outcomes in Multimedia Learning

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Authors

JUHAŇÁK Libor DOSTÁLOVÁ Nicol JUŘÍKOVÁ Zuzana JUŘÍK Vojtěch

Year of publication 2023
Type Appeared in Conference without Proceedings
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Arts

Citation
Description For more than two decades, the concept of self-regulation and self-regulated learning has received a great deal of attention in the scientific discourse of educational science, due to its proposed positive relationship with students' learning outcomes. To date, several different definitions and models of self-regulation and self-regulated learning have been proposed, leading to some theoretical fragmentation and confusion. Nevertheless, most definitions and models consider self-regulated learning as a cyclical process consisting of three phases: 1) the preparatory phase, 2) the performance phase (i.e., the phase of actual task performance), and 3) the reflective or the appraisal phase. Within each of these three general phases, students then engage in a range of cognitive, affective and metacognitive processes.
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