- Publisher:
- Cambridge University Press
- Online publication date:
- September 2019
- Print publication year:
- 2019
- Online ISBN:
- 9781316225226
- Subjects:
- Developmental Psychology, Psychology, Educational Psychology
Written by educational researchers and professionals working with children and adolescents in and out of school, this book shows how self-regulation involves more than an isolated individual's ability to control their thoughts and feelings, particularly in a learning environment. By using Vygotsky's cultural-historical psychological theory, the authors provide a unique set of four analytical lenses for a better understanding of how self-regulation, co-regulation, and other-regulation function as a system of regulatory processes. These lenses move beyond a focus on solitary individuals, who self-regulate behavior, to centre on individuals as relational, agential, and contextually situated. As agents, teachers and their students build their learning contexts and are influenced by these self-engineered contexts. This is a dynamic perspective of a social context and underlies the view that regulatory processes are an integral part of a functional system for learning.
'This book provides a carefully crafted blend of theory and practical ideas that make it possible for teachers to treat self-regulation as part of a constantly evolving classroom dynamic. The authors’ use of concrete cases to illustrate theoretical ideas succeeds in helping teachers to arrange lessons that create active learners.'
Michael Cole - Emeritus Distinguished Professor, University of California, San Diego
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