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The effects of self-regulation training on the academic productivity of secondary students with learning problems
Authors:Seabaugh  Gary O.  Schumaker  Jean B.
Affiliation:(1) Department of Human Development and Family Life, University of Kansas, USA;(2) Center for Research on Learning, Lawrence, Kansas;(3) The Plaza Academy, 4232 Mercier, P.O. Box 10361, 64111 Kansas City, MO
Abstract:Four self-regulation skills were taught in a series of student-teacher conferences to eight learning disabled (LD) and three non-disabled (NLD) adolescents in an alternative high school. All participants had a prior history of school failure and low lesson-completion rates. The skills taught were behavior contracting, self-recording, self-monitoring, and self-reinforcement. Self-instructional materials in reading, writing, and math were used as the curriculum, and the dependent variables in the study were the number of lessons completed per student per day in the three academic areas. Multiple-baseline designs across students and across academic areas were employed to assess the effects of the self-regulation training and the students' application of the self-regulation skills on lesson completion. Results indicate that all participating LD and NLD students substantially increased their rate of lesson completion after the intervention. These increases occurred in the academic areas targeted by the students for the application of the self-regulation skills. Thus, self-regulation interventions hold promise for bringing at-risk students into contact with the school curriculum.
Keywords:self-regulation procedures  self-control procedures  learning disabilities  secondary students  academic productivity
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