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Xiaoliang Zhu; Yixin Tang; Jiaqi Lu; Minyuan Song; Chunliang Yang; Xin Zhao – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Mathematical ability is a crucial component of human cognitive function, which is defined as the ability to acquire, process, and store mathematical information. While many studies have documented a close relationship between elementary school children's inhibitory control and their mathematical ability, existing empirical evidence remains…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Elementary School Students, Inhibition, Self Control
Robbie A. Ross; Kate E. Ascetta – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2025
Young children's self-regulation (SR) skills are linked to many important outcomes across the lifespan and school stakeholders widely agree that these skills should be prioritized in schools. Despite broad agreement about the importance of these skills, the diverse field of SR research is rife with a lack of clarity in both conceptual definitions…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Research, Interdisciplinary Approach, Self Control
Maike Trautner; Carola Grunschel; Malte Schwinger – Educational Psychology Review, 2025
Learners' attempts to regulate their own motivation for studying in the face of tedious or difficult tasks is an important aspect of self-regulated learning. Therefore, motivation regulation has received increasing attention over the past few years, resulting in numerous publications using different definitions of the construct, samples,…
Descriptors: Self Control, Learning Motivation, College Students, Student Attitudes
Cody W. Welty; Lindsay Bingham; Mario Morales; Lynn B. Gerald; Katherine D. Ellingson; Patricia L. Haynes – Journal of School Health, 2024
Background: Suicide is a leading cause of death for adolescents, and school connectedness is a potential, modifiable protective factor for suicide. We sought to examine if school connectedness protected against suicide among high school students and if potential moderators affected the relationship between school connectedness and suicide.…
Descriptors: Student School Relationship, Suicide, High School Students, Prevention
Sandra Liliana Camargo Salamanca; Andy Parra-Martínez; Ammi Chang; Yukiko Maeda; Anne Traynor – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
This meta-analysis explores the effect of using scoring rubrics on self-efficacy and self-regulation in K-16 formal learning settings and its potential moderators. From the literature, we identified 14 relevant experimental or quasi-experimental primary studies conducted with a total of 2793 students. We retrieved 17 effect sizes for self-efficacy…
Descriptors: Scoring Rubrics, Self Efficacy, Self Control, Elementary Secondary Education
Zeynep Simsir-Gokalp; Muhammet Ibrahim Akyurek – Journal of Education in Science, Environment and Health, 2024
Failure to exercise self-control is one of the leading causes of substance and behavioral addictions. Problematic social media usage (PSMU), a type of behavioral addiction, has become an increasingly serious problem with a significant impact on the lives of individuals of all generations. Therefore, it is crucial to understand the underlying…
Descriptors: Self Control, Mass Media Use, Addictive Behavior, Correlation
Hofstee, Marissa; Huijding, Jorg; Cuevas, Kimberly; Dekovic, Maja – Developmental Science, 2022
Integrating behavioral and neurophysiological measures has created new and advanced ways to understand the development of self-regulation. Electroencephalography (EEG) has been used to examine how self-regulatory processes are related to frontal alpha power during infancy and early childhood. However, findings across previous studies have been…
Descriptors: Infants, Young Children, Self Control, Medicine
Sun, Ting; Wang, Chuang; Wang, Yi – Reading and Writing: An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2022
Self-Regulated Strategy Development (SRSD) is a criterion-based teaching approach incorporating explicit and systematic instruction of writing strategies, knowledge or skills, and self-regulation procedures into writing. This study aims to estimate the overall average effect of SRSD on English writing outcomes and to examine the extent to which…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Self Control, Writing Improvement, English
Zuofei Geng; Bei Zeng; Liping Guo – Educational Psychology Review, 2024
Self-regulation develops rapidly during early childhood and is essential for academic and social adjustment. However, previous research has attempted to define the conceptualization and structure of self-regulation differently, leaving the field with an incomplete picture. The nature of the relations between self-regulation and early child…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Metacognition, Academic Ability, Self Control
Abdullah Selvitopu; Metin Kaya; Ahmet Taylan Aydin – Research in Educational Administration & Leadership, 2025
The present study was an attempt to examine the influence of national culture on the association between school leadership and teacher commitment. We systematically reviewed the literature on school leadership and teacher commitment, then followed a meta-analytic process by combining the data from the included studies and finally conducted…
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Teacher Persistence, Leadership, Correlation
Paiboon Jaikla; Araya Piyakun – Journal of Education and Learning, 2025
Emotional labor refers to the process by which employees are required to regulate their emotions in accordance with professionally specified requirements, rules, and guidelines. In the context of teaching, a significant portion of work is dedicated to the emotional labor of the teachers. Teaching, as a multifaceted profession, encompasses…
Descriptors: Research Reports, Outcomes of Education, Elementary School Teachers, High School Students
Garcia, Edisson Giovanny; Rolls, Nicola – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2023
The article analyzes the elements defined in Colombia as relevant to evaluate higher education (HE) quality. Using a literature review as the main source of information, this article reveals the way in which the HE system is a vehicle for a society of self-control and self-realization. Likewise, the implications for different actors involved in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Quality, Self Control
Lai, Chiu-Lin; Hwang, Gwo-Jen – Interactive Learning Environments, 2023
Researchers have pointed out the important role of self-regulation in learning. The self-regulated learning (SRL) process consists of three stages (i.e. forethought, performance, and self-reflection), each of which could involve different strategies for achieving the aim of SRL. To enable researchers and teachers to have a whole picture of how…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Electronic Learning, Self Management, Self Control
Vanessa H. Bal; Annabelle M. Mournet; Tori Glascock; Jacqueline Shinall; Gabrielle Gunin; Nikita Jadav; Henry Zhang; Emily Brennan; Emily Istvan; Evan M. Kleiman – Autism: The International Journal of Research and Practice, 2024
Difficulties regulating emotions during periods of distress may contribute to the high rates of co-occurring depression and anxiety in autistic adults. The emotional support plan (ESP) is a brief intervention designed to support autistic adults to use positive coping skills during periods of distress. Thirty-six autistic adults participated in…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Intervention, Autism Spectrum Disorders
Karen Aldrup; Bastian Carstensen; Uta Klusmann – Educational Psychologist, 2024
Theoretical perspectives emphasize the relevance of teachers managing their emotions for positive teacher-student interactions and student outcomes (i.e., teaching effectiveness). Four largely distinct lines of research inspired by (1) Gross' process model of emotion regulation, the concepts of (2) coping, (3) emotional labor, and (4) emotional…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Self Control, Teacher Response, Teacher Student Relationship