The Pursuit of ExceHence
Through Education
Edited by
Michel Ferrari
University of Toronto
m LAWRENCE ERLBAUM ASSOCIATES, PUBLISHERS
2002 Mahwah, New Jersey London
Achieving Academic Excellence:
A Self-Regulatory Perspective
Barry J. Zimmerman
City University af New York
Chapter 4
The attainment of optimal academic performance requires more than
high quality insttuction and requisite mental ability on the part of students:
It requires personal initiative, diligence, and self-directive skill.
Research on self-regulated leaming grew out of efforts to understand the
nature and source of these forms of students' proactivity, and it has revealed
evidence of substantial correlation between their use and academic achievement.
Self-regulation refers to self-generated thoughts, feelings, and actions
that are planned and cyclically adapted to the attainment of personal
goals (Schunk & Zimmerman, 1994). Because use of self-regulatory processes-
such as goal setting, use of learning strategies, and self-monitoring-
requires both time and effort, a second key issue in understanding
students' initiative to excel academically is their sources of motivation.
Students' sense of personal agency about the quality of their performance
has been hypothesized to play a key self-motivational role (Bandura,
1997j. An important self-motivational variable is self-efficacy, which refers to
beliefs about one's capabilities to organize and implement actions necessary
to attain a designated performance of skill for specific tasks.
This chapter considers research indicating that academic excellence,
like other forms of exemplary achievement, depends on expertise in selfregulatory
processes and supportive motivational beliefs, especially perceived
efficacy (Bandura, 1997; Pajares & Miller, 1994; Zimmerman,
1995). More specifically, I describe the relationship between self-regulation
and expert performance, a cyclical theory of academic self-regu-
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