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Self-Regulatory Climate: A Social Resource for Student Regulation and Achievement.

Authors :
ADAMS, CURT M.
FORSYTH, PATRICK B.
DOLLARHIDE, ELLEN
MISKELL, RYAN
WARE, JORDAN
Source :
Teachers College Record. Feb2015, Vol. 117 Issue 2, p1-28. 28p.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Background/Context: Schools have differential effects on student learning and development, but research has not generated much explanatory evidence of the social-psychological pathway to better achievement outcomes. Explanatory evidence of how normative conditions enable students to thrive is particularly relevant in the urban context where attention disproportionately centers on the pathology of these environments rather than social attributes that contribute to student growth. Research Purpose: Our purpose in this study was to determine if a self-regulatory climate works through student self-regulation to influence academic achievement. We hypothesized that (1) self-regulatory climate explains school-level differences in self-regulated learning, and (2) self-regulated learning mediates the relationship between self-regulatory climate and math achievement. Research Design: We used expost facto survey data from students and teachers in 80 elementary and secondary schools from a large, southwestern urban school district. A multilevel modeling building process in HLM 7.0 was used to test our hypotheses. Results: Both hypotheses were supported. Self-regulatory climate explained significant schoollevel variance in self-regulated learning. Additionally, student self-regulated learning mediated the relationship between self-regulatory climate and math achievement. Conclusions: Our results suggest that schools, like teachers, have differential effects on the motivational resources of students, with self-regulatory climate being an essential social condition for self-regulation and achievement. We believe self-regulatory climate has value for educators seeking to provide equitable learning opportunities for all students and for researchers seeking to account for achievement differences attributed to schools. In both cases, selfregulatory climate advances a construct and measure that conceptualizes and operationalizes school-level support for psychological needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01614681
Volume :
117
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Teachers College Record
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
101477849
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/016146811511700207