Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation

This paper describes research in progress concerning the development and use of a newly created tool, the Decision-Making Grid, which was designed to teach undergraduate management students to develop and use metacognitive regulation skills to improve decision-making by requiring students to constru...

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Main Author: Carolyn Davis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georgia Southern University 2013-07-01
Series:International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol7/iss2/14
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spelling doaj-1cbba9475cf84b7a834388824cdd62e52020-11-24T21:41:07ZengGeorgia Southern UniversityInternational Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1931-47442013-07-017210.20429/ijsotl.2013.070214Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic PreparationCarolyn DavisThis paper describes research in progress concerning the development and use of a newly created tool, the Decision-Making Grid, which was designed to teach undergraduate management students to develop and use metacognitive regulation skills to improve decision-making by requiring students to construct improved decision-making models in a boundedly rational manner. When students are required to use the metacognitive skills of planning, monitoring and evaluating focused on important and relevant decision-criteria, students are better positioned to commit to appropriate academic preparation. The null hypothesis proposing that there would be no variance in means in the measure of commitment to academic preparation was rejected using data from three academic years of data. Qualitative analyses provide evidence that the Grid can help students commit to academic preparation.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol7/iss2/14Organizational behaviorLearningMetacognitionStudent commitment
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carolyn Davis
spellingShingle Carolyn Davis
Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation
International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Organizational behavior
Learning
Metacognition
Student commitment
author_facet Carolyn Davis
author_sort Carolyn Davis
title Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation
title_short Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation
title_full Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation
title_fullStr Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation
title_full_unstemmed Challenging the Academically Adrift: A New Decision-Making Tool to Help Improve Student Commitment to Academic Preparation
title_sort challenging the academically adrift: a new decision-making tool to help improve student commitment to academic preparation
publisher Georgia Southern University
series International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
issn 1931-4744
publishDate 2013-07-01
description This paper describes research in progress concerning the development and use of a newly created tool, the Decision-Making Grid, which was designed to teach undergraduate management students to develop and use metacognitive regulation skills to improve decision-making by requiring students to construct improved decision-making models in a boundedly rational manner. When students are required to use the metacognitive skills of planning, monitoring and evaluating focused on important and relevant decision-criteria, students are better positioned to commit to appropriate academic preparation. The null hypothesis proposing that there would be no variance in means in the measure of commitment to academic preparation was rejected using data from three academic years of data. Qualitative analyses provide evidence that the Grid can help students commit to academic preparation.
topic Organizational behavior
Learning
Metacognition
Student commitment
url https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol7/iss2/14
work_keys_str_mv AT carolyndavis challengingtheacademicallyadriftanewdecisionmakingtooltohelpimprovestudentcommitmenttoacademicpreparation
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