Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints

The present study investigated factors influencing Chinese junior school students’ study time allocation and the age difference in the effect of habitual responding. Participants were 240 junior school students (120 girls, 120 boys; aged 13–15 years) with half taking part in experiment 1 and half in...

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Main Authors: Fuyun eWang, Yanju eJiang, Qiwen eQin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2016-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00639/full
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spelling doaj-6c01cab2e7264a9ab83356d3e51f8a8f2020-11-25T00:03:34ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782016-05-01710.3389/fpsyg.2016.00639183729Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time ConstraintsFuyun eWang0Yanju eJiang1Qiwen eQin2Southwest UniversityHenan UniversitySouthwest UniversityThe present study investigated factors influencing Chinese junior school students’ study time allocation and the age difference in the effect of habitual responding. Participants were 240 junior school students (120 girls, 120 boys; aged 13–15 years) with half taking part in experiment 1 and half in experiment 2, and 240 young adults aged 18-23 years, (120 women and 120 men,) involved in experiment 3a and 3b, all native Chinese speakers. In Experiments 1 and 3a, Chinese word pairs (e.g., moon–star) were presented on the screen with three items in one array. In each trial, the items were arranged from left to right, either easy, moderate, then difficult, or the reverse. Participants had either 5 s or no time limits to study the word pairs. In Experiment 2&3b, word pairs were ordered in a column with the easiest items either at the top or bottom position. Results showed interactions among item difficulty, item order, and time limitation in terms of effects on study time allocation of junior school students. Participants tended to learn the items in order (from left to right and from top to bottom), but the effect of item difficulty was greater than that of item order on item selection. Results indicated that agenda and habitual responding have a combined effect on study time allocation and that the contribution of agenda is greater than that of habitual responding. The effect of habitual responding on the self-paced study and recall performance of junior school students is greater than its effect on young adults, and the study time allocation of junior school students is more likely to be affected by external conditions.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00639/fullmetacognitionAgenda-based regulationhabitual respondingstudy time allocationjunior school students
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fuyun eWang
Yanju eJiang
Qiwen eQin
spellingShingle Fuyun eWang
Yanju eJiang
Qiwen eQin
Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints
Frontiers in Psychology
metacognition
Agenda-based regulation
habitual responding
study time allocation
junior school students
author_facet Fuyun eWang
Yanju eJiang
Qiwen eQin
author_sort Fuyun eWang
title Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints
title_short Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints
title_full Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints
title_fullStr Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints
title_full_unstemmed Allocation of Study Time in Chinese Junior School Students: Habitual Responding, Item Difficulty, and Time Constraints
title_sort allocation of study time in chinese junior school students: habitual responding, item difficulty, and time constraints
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2016-05-01
description The present study investigated factors influencing Chinese junior school students’ study time allocation and the age difference in the effect of habitual responding. Participants were 240 junior school students (120 girls, 120 boys; aged 13–15 years) with half taking part in experiment 1 and half in experiment 2, and 240 young adults aged 18-23 years, (120 women and 120 men,) involved in experiment 3a and 3b, all native Chinese speakers. In Experiments 1 and 3a, Chinese word pairs (e.g., moon–star) were presented on the screen with three items in one array. In each trial, the items were arranged from left to right, either easy, moderate, then difficult, or the reverse. Participants had either 5 s or no time limits to study the word pairs. In Experiment 2&3b, word pairs were ordered in a column with the easiest items either at the top or bottom position. Results showed interactions among item difficulty, item order, and time limitation in terms of effects on study time allocation of junior school students. Participants tended to learn the items in order (from left to right and from top to bottom), but the effect of item difficulty was greater than that of item order on item selection. Results indicated that agenda and habitual responding have a combined effect on study time allocation and that the contribution of agenda is greater than that of habitual responding. The effect of habitual responding on the self-paced study and recall performance of junior school students is greater than its effect on young adults, and the study time allocation of junior school students is more likely to be affected by external conditions.
topic metacognition
Agenda-based regulation
habitual responding
study time allocation
junior school students
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00639/full
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