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Maria Theobald – British Journal of Educational Psychology, 2025
Background and Aims: The hypothesis that study strategies can compensate for less study time in predicting learning outcomes has often been proposed but rarely tested empirically. Methods: In the present study, 231 university students reported their daily perceived time spent on self-study, study strategies (planning, monitoring, concentration and…
Descriptors: Study Skills, Study Habits, Learning Strategies, Time on Task
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Skylar J. Laursen; Dorina Sluka; Chris M. Fiacconi – Metacognition and Learning, 2024
Previous literature suggests learners can adjust their encoding strategies to match the demands of the expected test format. However, it is unclear whether other forms of metacognitive control, namely, study time allocation and restudy selection, are also sensitive to expected test format. Across four experiments we examined whether learners…
Descriptors: Test Format, Test Wiseness, Metacognition, Study Habits
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Christopher A. Wolters; Anna C. Brady; Hyun Ji Lee – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Personal organization, productivity, and efficient use of one's time represents one of the most ubiquitous and popular subjects within the self-help media marketed to general audiences. Consistent with this view, researchers have established that increased or more effective time management is predictive of improved well-being and performance…
Descriptors: Time Management, Academic Achievement, Student Motivation, Independent Study
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Jennifer S. Feenstra; Chika Nwaelugo; Jessica Nibbelink; Andrew De Noble – Discover Education, 2024
Study skills are important for success in college. However, students may not be aware of or willing to use effective strategies such as spaced practice and self-testing. This replication-extension study of Susser and McCabe (Susser and McCabe in Instr Sci 41:345-363, 2013) supports their original findings regarding spaced practice and extends the…
Descriptors: College Students, Study Habits, Learning Strategies, Metacognition
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Jhon Jairo Ramírez-Echeverry; Felipe Restrepo-Calle; Stephanie Torres Jiménez – European Journal of Education, 2025
This study investigates the self-regulated learning strategies employed by students in computer programming courses. Utilising the Questionnaire on Learning Strategies in Computer Programming (CEAPC), the research aims to identify specific strategies used by students. The findings reveal a variety of effective learning strategies, including…
Descriptors: Independent Study, Learning Strategies, Programming, Computer Science Education
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Tekin, Eylul – Educational Psychology Review, 2022
The existing literature on study time allocation has primarily focused on how people regulate their study time allocation across different items and conditions. However, these studies rarely investigated how self-regulated study time allocation affects later retention. In this review, the effectiveness of self-regulated study time allocation on…
Descriptors: Study Habits, Time Management, Independent Study, Retention (Psychology)
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Lina Bilal Abu Hassan; Hamzeh Abdulkarim Al-Rababah – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: Academic procrastination, prevalent among university students, impacts performance and well-being, yet its dynamics in Arab contexts remain underexplored. This study addresses the research gap by examining the direct and indirect effects of academic psychological capital (PsyCap; self-efficacy, resilience, optimism, hope) on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Students, Higher Education, Psychological Characteristics
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Hsu, Chia-Yu; Horikoshi, Izumi; Li, Huiyong; Majumdar, Rwitajit; Ogata, Hiroaki – Smart Learning Environments, 2023
The development of technology enables diverse learning experiences nowadays, which shows the importance of learners' self-regulated skills at the same time. Particularly, the ability to allocate time properly becomes an issue for learners since time is a resource owned by all of them. However, they tend to struggle to manage their time well due to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 7, Independent Study, Time Factors (Learning)
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Kathryn L. Hamilton; Alicia A. Stachowski – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2025
Research on study habits among college students demonstrates a difference between what students should do and what they actually do. We sought to understand students' break-taking habits and perceptions within the context of study behaviors. One hundred and sixteen undergraduate students responded to a survey of their study break-taking behaviors,…
Descriptors: Study Habits, Undergraduate Students, Student Behavior, Time Management
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Schuetze, Brendan A.; Yan, Veronica X. – Cognitive Science, 2022
Learners are often constrained by their available study time, typically having to make a trade-off between depth and breadth of learning. Classic experimental paradigms in memory research treat all items as equally important, but this is unlikely the case in reality. Rather, information varies in importance, and people vary in their ability to…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Study Habits, Time Factors (Learning), Time Management
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Martin Hecht; Julia-Kim Walther; Manuel Arnold; Steffen Zitzmann – Structural Equation Modeling: A Multidisciplinary Journal, 2024
Planning longitudinal studies can be challenging as various design decisions need to be made. Often, researchers are in search for the optimal design that maximizes statistical power to test certain parameters of the employed model. We provide a user-friendly Shiny app OptDynMo available at https://shiny.psychologie.hu-berlin.de/optdynmo that…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Best Practices, Operating Expenses, Research Design
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Fincham, Frank; May, Ross – College Student Journal, 2021
Academic procrastination is widespread among college students, leads to poorer academic performance and has been related to concurrent stress. Because the direction of effects between procrastination and stress is unclear, two longitudinal studies were conducted. Study 1 (n = 454) showed that mid-semester levels of stress were related to end of…
Descriptors: Stress Variables, College Students, Study Habits, Intervention
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Maureen Snow Andrade – Higher Education Policy, 2025
Federal policy mandates that all U.S. higher education institutions and regional accrediting bodies comply with credit hour regulations. A credit hour equates to 1 h in class and a minimum of 2 h of study out of class for approximately 15 weeks. To meet these regulations, institutions have implemented policies for designating and reviewing course…
Descriptors: College Credits, Higher Education, Educational Policy, Public Policy
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Ekici, Funda; Atasoy, Basri – Shanlax International Journal of Education, 2022
This study aimed to promote self-regulated learning skills in pre-service teachers, and to this end, a two-year Self-Regulated Learning Skills Development (SLSD) Plan for pre-service chemistry teachers was developed. In this SLSD plan, the strategy instruction was conducted in an integrated way into the content courses of the chemistry education…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Chemistry, Science Teachers, Independent Study
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Yan, Veronica X.; Sana, Faria – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2021
When learning new information, should students focus on studying 1 concept at a time or should they alternate studying between different concepts? Recent research shows that students should mix up or interleave the study of different concepts, particularly when the concepts are related or hard to discriminate (Carvalho & Goldstone, 2015). But…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Beliefs, Evidence, Metacognition
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