课堂上的元认知错误:过去表现的可变性对考试预测准确性的作用。

IF 3.9 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Lisa Geraci, Nayantara Kurpad, Robert Tirso, Kathryn N Gray, Yan Wang
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引用次数: 0

摘要

学生们经常对自己的考试成绩做出错误的预测,表现最差的学生预测的不准确性最大。成绩差的学生做出不准确预测的原因尚不完全清楚。在两项研究中,我们验证了这样一个假设:成绩差的学生之所以会错误地预测自己的考试成绩,部分原因是他们过去的成绩差异很大,导致他们无法根据不可靠的数据进行预测。相比之下,表现优异的学生往往有持续的高过去的表现,他们可以依靠相对准确的预测未来的考试成绩。结果表明,在不同的考试(研究1)和不同的课程(研究2)中,表现差的学生比表现好的学生有更多的变化。此外,研究2的结果表明,过去课程表现的可变性(但不是过去的考试表现)与校准不良有关。结果表明,过去表现的可变性可能是导致成绩差的学生错误预测成绩的一个因素。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Metacognitive errors in the classroom: The role of variability of past performance on exam prediction accuracy.

Metacognitive errors in the classroom: The role of variability of past performance on exam prediction accuracy.

Students often make incorrect predictions about their exam performance, with the lowest-performing students showing the greatest inaccuracies in their predictions. The reasons why low-performing students make inaccurate predictions are not fully understood. In two studies, we tested the hypothesis that low-performing students erroneously predict their exam performance in part because their past performance varies considerably, yielding unreliable data from which to make their predictions. In contrast, high-performing students tend to have consistently high past performance that they can rely on to make relatively accurate predictions of future test performance. Results showed that across different exams (Study 1) and different courses (Study 2), low-performing students had more variable past performance than high-performing students. Further, results from Study 2 showed that variability in past course performance (but not past exam performance) was associated with poor calibration. Results suggest that variability in past performance may be one factor that contributes to low-performing students' erroneous performance predictions.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
15.20%
发文量
39
期刊介绍: The journal "Metacognition and Learning" addresses various components of metacognition, such as metacognitive awareness, experiences, knowledge, and executive skills. Both general metacognition as well as domain-specific metacognitions in various task domains (mathematics, physics, reading, writing etc.) are considered. Papers may address fundamental theoretical issues, measurement issues regarding both quantitative and qualitative methods, as well as empirical studies about individual differences in metacognition, relations with other learner characteristics and learning strategies, developmental issues, the training of metacognition components in learning, and the teacher’s role in metacognition training. Studies highlighting the role of metacognition in self- or co-regulated learning as well as its relations with motivation and affect are also welcomed. Submitted papers are judged on theoretical relevance, methodological thoroughness, and appeal to an international audience. The journal aims for a high academic standard with relevance to the field of educational practices. One restriction is that papers should pertain to the role of metacognition in learning situations. Self-regulation in clinical settings, such as coping with phobia or anxiety outside learning situations, is beyond the scope of the journal.
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