Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning

Culture, as an advanced form of social life, is internalized within each individual as an essential component of learning, socializing, and developing (Baumeister, 2011; Greenfield et al., 2003). Self-regulated learning (SRL), as demonstrated in the literature, is essential for students’ academic su...

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Main Author: Wu, Meng Qi
Other Authors: Hadwin, Allyson
Format: Others
Language:English
en
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12558
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spelling ndltd-uvic.ca-oai-dspace.library.uvic.ca-1828-125582021-01-14T17:35:48Z Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning Wu, Meng Qi Hadwin, Allyson Self-regulated learning culture measurement invariance Chinese notion of learning academic engagement Culture, as an advanced form of social life, is internalized within each individual as an essential component of learning, socializing, and developing (Baumeister, 2011; Greenfield et al., 2003). Self-regulated learning (SRL), as demonstrated in the literature, is essential for students’ academic success, where self-regulated learners strategically and metacognitively plan, monitor, and adapt their learning processes to achieve their goals in learning (Winne & Hadwin, 1998; Winne, 1995; Zimmerman, 2002). Because SRL theories significantly emphasize the importance of social contexts, culture is likely to influence how individuals develop and gain SRL competency. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of cross-cultural studies of SRL research; thus, this study aimed to examine and compare Chinese international and Canadian domestic students’ self-reported engagement in SRL processes and their academic performance. To achieve this purpose, we adopted an emic approach by evaluating Winne and Hadwin’s (1998) model of SRL and systematically comparing it with Chinese conceptualization of learning (e.g., Confucianism). Then, we used an advanced statistical method to investigate the measurement invariance of the Regulation of Learning Questionnaire (RLQ) designed to capture SRL as dynamic processes unfolding over time for Chinese and Canadian groups. Our findings supported configural and metric invariances across Chinese and Canadian cultural groups. Based on the evidence of partial scalar invariance, we also identified single items that contributed to scalar non-invariance. This study demonstrated the significance of examining the measurement invariance across cultures, which warrants comparability in cross-cultural comparisons, and contributed greatly to the current literature on the relation between culture and SRL. Graduate 2021-01-13T20:07:36Z 2021-01-13T20:07:36Z 2020 2021-01-13 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12558 English en Available to the World Wide Web application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Self-regulated learning
culture
measurement invariance
Chinese notion of learning
academic engagement
spellingShingle Self-regulated learning
culture
measurement invariance
Chinese notion of learning
academic engagement
Wu, Meng Qi
Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
description Culture, as an advanced form of social life, is internalized within each individual as an essential component of learning, socializing, and developing (Baumeister, 2011; Greenfield et al., 2003). Self-regulated learning (SRL), as demonstrated in the literature, is essential for students’ academic success, where self-regulated learners strategically and metacognitively plan, monitor, and adapt their learning processes to achieve their goals in learning (Winne & Hadwin, 1998; Winne, 1995; Zimmerman, 2002). Because SRL theories significantly emphasize the importance of social contexts, culture is likely to influence how individuals develop and gain SRL competency. Nevertheless, there is a paucity of cross-cultural studies of SRL research; thus, this study aimed to examine and compare Chinese international and Canadian domestic students’ self-reported engagement in SRL processes and their academic performance. To achieve this purpose, we adopted an emic approach by evaluating Winne and Hadwin’s (1998) model of SRL and systematically comparing it with Chinese conceptualization of learning (e.g., Confucianism). Then, we used an advanced statistical method to investigate the measurement invariance of the Regulation of Learning Questionnaire (RLQ) designed to capture SRL as dynamic processes unfolding over time for Chinese and Canadian groups. Our findings supported configural and metric invariances across Chinese and Canadian cultural groups. Based on the evidence of partial scalar invariance, we also identified single items that contributed to scalar non-invariance. This study demonstrated the significance of examining the measurement invariance across cultures, which warrants comparability in cross-cultural comparisons, and contributed greatly to the current literature on the relation between culture and SRL. === Graduate
author2 Hadwin, Allyson
author_facet Hadwin, Allyson
Wu, Meng Qi
author Wu, Meng Qi
author_sort Wu, Meng Qi
title Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
title_short Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
title_full Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
title_fullStr Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
title_full_unstemmed Culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on Chinese international and Canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
title_sort culture and self-regulated learning: exploring cultural influences on chinese international and canadian domestic undergraduate students’ engagement in self-regulated learning
publishDate 2021
url http://hdl.handle.net/1828/12558
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