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Educational Psychology
An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology
Volume 31, 2011 - Issue 6
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Articles

Self-regulation of assessment beliefs and attitudes: a review of the Students’ Conceptions of Assessment inventory

Pages 731-748 | Received 22 Mar 2011, Accepted 21 Jun 2011, Published online: 18 Jul 2011
 

Abstract

How students understand, feel about and respond to assessment might contribute significantly to learning behaviour and academic achievement. This paper reviews studies that have used a relatively new self-reported survey questionnaire (Students’ Conceptions of Assessment – SCoA) about student perceptions and understandings of assessment. Confirmatory factor analyses and structural equation modelling results have shown, consistent with self-regulation theory, that the SCoA inventory has meaningful relations with academic performance among New Zealand high school students. Further, German, Hong Kong, American, and New Zealand studies have shown that the SCoA has relations to motivational constructs (e.g. effort, learning strategies, interest, self-efficacy and anxiety) that are also consistent with self-regulation. The SCoA inventory extends our understanding of how student conceptions of assessment are an integral part of self-regulation and provide a warrant for use in research studies investigating test-taker responses to assessment practices and innovations at both university and high school levels.

Acknowledgement

This manuscript was written during academic leave with the support of the Department of Curriculum and Instruction of the Hong Kong Institute of Education.

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