Meike Landmann
Technische Universität Darmstadt
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Zeitschrift Fur Arbeits-und Organisationspsychologie | 2005
Meike Landmann; Andrea Pöhnl; Bernhard Schmitz
Zusammenfassung. Zielsetzung der beschriebenen Studie ist die Entwicklung einer Intervention zur Vermittlung selbstregulatorischer Kompetenzen im Rahmen der beruflichen Neuorientierung und Ruckkehr in das Erwerbsleben. Durch die Vermittlung motivationaler und volitionaler Strategien sollte die berufliche Zielerreichung gesteigert werden. Evaluiert wurde mittels Kontrollgruppendesign, Prozessanalyse und einer Stabilitatsmessung 2.5 Jahre nach Abschluss des Trainings. Die Durchfuhrung der Intervention erfolgte an einer Stichprobe von 56 Frauen, die sich in Phasen beruflicher Neuorientierung oder der Berufsruckkehr befanden. Die Konzeption des Trainings ist an das Handlungsphasenmodell von Heckhausen (1989) angelehnt. Es besteht aus 4 wochentlichen Schulungseinheiten a 2 Stunden. Daruber hinaus wird es von einem Monitoring-Prozess in Form von taglich auszufullenden Tagebuchern begleitet. Diese dienen sowohl der Vertiefung der Interventionsinhalte als auch der prozessualen Erfassung der Langsschnittdaten. Inh...
Zeitschrift Fur Psychologie-journal of Psychology | 2007
Bernhard Schmitz; Michaela Schmidt; Meike Landmann; Christiane Spiel
This special issue offers some examples for the state of the art in the field of research on self-regulation. It includes the development of new instruments to assess relevant aspects of self-regulation, the prediction of self-regulation strategy use, the efficient improvement of self-regulated learning, the integration of self-regulated learning in everyday school life, and the validation of a process approach to selfregulation. Self-regulation represents the essential capability of living organisms to adapt to the requirements of different and changing environments (Zimmerman, 2000; Baumeister & Vohs, 2004). These aspects become increasingly important because the demands of the environment and, thus, the demands on individuals, change rapidly and continually. For example, people have to deal with an increasing amount of knowledge. Also, the results of the OECD Program of International Student Assessment (PISA) pointed out the importance of the growing use of self-regulation strategies (see e.g., Ertl, 2006). In school as well as in professional life, but also in everyday life, it is necessary to be able to continuously acquire new knowledge or adapt already existing knowledge to new requirements. In this regard, self-regulation is becoming increasingly important for academic learning as well as for vocational development and professional careers. Systematic research on self-regulation began in the mid1980s, mainly in the areas of social psychology and personality psychology. In the 1990s, publications began to appear in educational, organizational, clinical, and health psychology journals (see Boekaerts, Pintrich, & Zeidner, 2000). In the meantime, research was able to prove that self-regulation is important in many different fields of psychology, such as health behavior, vocational development, learning and education (e.g., Boekaerts, Maes, & Karoly, 2005; Frayne & Geringer, 2000; Schwarzer, Scholz, Lippke, Sniehotta, & Ziegelmann, 2006; Schunk & Zimmerman, 1998; Schmitz & Wiese, 2006). It was shown that self-regulation is important throughout the whole life span and can be used in a great variety of areas of life including attention disorders, emotion-regulation, writing, and vocational goal attainment (e.g., Barkley, 2004; Latham & Frayne, 1989; Larsen & Prizmic, 2004; Leutner & Leopold, 2006; Zimmerman & Kitsantas, 1997). Depending on the specific focus, various partly overlapping models of selfregulated learning are available. Self-regulation is originally based on a system-theoretic concept of regulation (Wiener, 1948). This technical model can be transferred to human behavior. In the system-theoretic model a desired value is compared with the actual value. In case of deviations, regulation becomes necessary. Based on this basic assumption, Bandura (1986) described goals (desired values), acting, identification of the actual value (monitoring), and regulation as essential aspects of self-regulation. In line with Bandura, Zimmerman developed a frequently used model of self-regulation that describes the process of self-regulation as a sequence of the three phases (1) planning, (2) acting and volitional control, and (3) self-reflection (e.g., Zimmerman, 2000; Zimmerman & Kitsantas, 2007). Central characteristics of the model are feedback loops and the inclusion of motivational and emotional components. It differs from other models of selfregulation that focus primarily on the cognitive perspective. Winne (1996) accents the metacognitive perspective. He defined self-regulated learning as a metacognitively-governed behavior where learners regulate their use of cognitive tactics and strategies. Another distinction between models of self-regulation is the postulated influence of the situation on self-regulation behavior. Winne and Perry (2000), for example, consider self-regulation as a personal trait. Other authors like Schmitz (2001) focus on how the situation influences self-regulation. Boekaerts (1997) defines self-regulated learning as a complex interaction between (meta)cognitive and motivational
Zeitschrift Fur Psychologie-journal of Psychology | 2007
Franziska Perels; Barbara Otto; Meike Landmann; Silke Hertel; Bernhard Schmitz
Abstract. The first aim of this study was to analyze self-regulation from a process perspective. Therefore, a process model of self-regulation (Schmitz & Wiese, 2006) was described, postulating state components of self-regulation in three learning phases. The relationships within the model were investigated by means of univariate and multivariate time-series analyses based on process data collected through learning diaries. The second aim was to evaluate an intervention study with 8th-grade students as an example for training evaluation based on process data. The whole sample consisted of 249 8th-grade students; for time-series analyses a subsample of 66 students was used. The results concerning the first research question support the conceptualization of the process model and underline the process character of self-regulation as well as the state conceptualization of the model. The training evaluation results show that specifying the results of standard evaluations by means of control group comparison wi...
Archive | 2015
Meike Landmann; Franziska Perels; Barbara Otto; Kathleen Schnick-Vollmer; Bernhard Schmitz
Selbstregulation beschreibt die Fahigkeit, die eigenen Gedanken, Emotionen und Handlungen zielgerichtet zu steuern. Insbesondere im schulischen Alltag sind selbstregulative Kompetenzen unerlasslich. In diesem Zusammenhang sprechen wir von selbstreguliertem Lernen. Das Kapitel stellt zunachst ausgewahlte Prozess- (Pintrich, 2000, Schmitz, 2001; Zimmerman, 2000) und Schichtenmodelle (Boekaerts, 1999; Landmann & Schmitz, 2007a) der Selbstregulation und des selbstregulierten Lernens vor. Es folgt eine Darstellung von Verfahren zur Diagnostik von Selbstregulation (Fragebogen, Lerntagebucher, Interviews und Beobachtungsverfahren). Daran anschliesend werden Ansatze zur Forderung (indirekte vs. direkte Forderung; kontextbezogene Forderung; Transfersicherung) des selbstregulierten Lernens erlautert. Beispielhaft werden Interventionen vorgestellt. Das Kapitel endet mit einem Ausblick auf zukunftige Forschungsfelder und praktische Herausforderungen.
Archive | 2007
Meike Landmann; Bernhard Schmitz
Archive | 2007
Bernhard Schmitz; Meike Landmann; Franziska Perels
Archive | 2009
Michaela Schmidt; Meike Landmann; Kirsten Van de Loo
Archive | 2007
Meike Landmann; Monika Trittel; Katharina Krause
Archive | 2007
Franziska Perels; Meike Landmann; Bernhard Schmitz
Archive | 2006
Meike Landmann