Students’ and Teachers’ Monitoring and Regulation of Students’ Text Comprehension: Effects of Comprehension Cue Availability

Publication date: Available online 7 February 2019Source: Contemporary Educational PsychologyAuthor(s): Janneke van de Pol, Anique B.H. de Bruin, Mariëtte H. van Loon, Tamara van GogAbstractFor regulation of text learning to be effective, students need to accurately monitor their text comprehension. Similarly, to provide adaptive instruction, teachers need to accurately monitor and regulate students’ text comprehension. Performing generative activities prior to monitoring has been suggested to provide students with diagnostic cues, improving monitoring accuracy; an open question is whether this would also help teachers. We investigated whether two generative activities, diagram completion and diagram drawing, improved secondary education students’ (n = 248) monitoring and regulation accuracy of text comprehension (Experiment 1) and whether viewing students’ diagrams improved teachers’ (N = 18) monitoring and regulation of students’ text comprehension (Experiment 2). Students’ monitoring and teachers’ regulation accuracy was higher in the diagramming conditions than in the no-diagramming condition. Students and teachers used diagnostic cues when judging students’ text comprehension: Improving students’ monitoring and teachers’ regulation of students’ text comprehension relies on improving accessibility of diagnostic cues.
Source: Contemporary Educational Psychology - Category: Child Development Source Type: research