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Advancing Educational Research on Children’s Self-Regulation With Observational Measures

Published version
Peer-reviewed

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Abstract

Self-regulation is crucial for children’s development and learning. Almost by convention, it is assumed that self-regulation is a relatively stable skill, and little is known about its dynamic nature and context dependency. Traditional measurement approaches such as single direct assessments and adult reports are not well suited to address questions around variations of self-regulation within individuals and influences from social-contextual factors. Measures relying on child observations are uniquely positioned to address these questions and to advance the field by shedding light on self-regulatory variability and incremental growth. In this paper, we review traditional measurement approaches (direct assessments and adult reports) and recently developed observational measures. We discuss which questions observational measures are best suited to address and why traditional measurement approaches fall short. Finally, we share lessons learned based on our experiences using child observations in educational settings and discuss how measurement approaches should be carefully aligned to the research questions.

Description

Peer reviewed: True


Funder: National Academy of Education/Spencer Dissertation Fellowship


Funder: EUR Fellowship Grant from the Erasmus University Rotterdam


Funder: LEGO Foundation and Cambridge Trust

Journal Title

Journal of Psychoeducational Assessment

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0734-2829
1557-5144

Volume Title

41

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Rights and licensing

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/