Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning

A Self-Administered Motivational Instrument (the SAMI) was designed to assist university entrants to reflect on their approaches to tertiary study and to consider how they could develop more effective approaches to learning and focus on the provision of self-feedback. The instrument was used in a co...

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Main Authors: Duffy, T., Houston, M., Rimmer, R.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/73993/
http://www.reflectingeducation.net/index.php/reflecting/article/view/105
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spelling ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:73993 2023-05-15T18:10:35+02:00 Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning Duffy, T. Houston, M. Rimmer, R. 2012 http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/73993/ http://www.reflectingeducation.net/index.php/reflecting/article/view/105 unknown Duffy, T., Houston, M. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/9789.html> and Rimmer, R. (2012) Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning. Reflecting Education <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/journal_volume/Reflecting_Education.html>, 8(1), pp. 32-56. Articles PeerReviewed 2012 ftuglasgow 2022-04-07T22:09:38Z A Self-Administered Motivational Instrument (the SAMI) was designed to assist university entrants to reflect on their approaches to tertiary study and to consider how they could develop more effective approaches to learning and focus on the provision of self-feedback. The instrument was used in a controlled experiment with entrants to nursing programmes at the University of the West of Scotland. These pre-registration nurses completed the SAMI in their second week of study and again in Week 11. This provided the opportunity to assess the SAMI as a means of stimulating students towards self-regulation and form self-feedback mechanisms. A measure of constructive friction, dissonance or ambivalence is created in the SAMI by asking students to consider how well they have been doing with their current study regime, how well they could potentially do if they tried their hardest, drawing students to consider aspects of how they learn and reflect on the organisation of their study routines. These measures within the SAMI provide the basis from which students complete questions structured by tutors and construct useful self-feedback. In the current paper, the aim is to confirm the outcomes of previous studies that have found a link between student completion of the SAMI and performance and to investigate whether this quantitative finding is accompanied by autonomous use of experiential feedback students had of themselves (self-feedback) to initiate, monitor and control changes of study approach. The results of a mixed-method approach indicate that students undertook self-regulated change and had the self-efficacy to understand they could succeed in making changes and in attaining their academic goals. Article in Journal/Newspaper sami University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
institution Open Polar
collection University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications
op_collection_id ftuglasgow
language unknown
description A Self-Administered Motivational Instrument (the SAMI) was designed to assist university entrants to reflect on their approaches to tertiary study and to consider how they could develop more effective approaches to learning and focus on the provision of self-feedback. The instrument was used in a controlled experiment with entrants to nursing programmes at the University of the West of Scotland. These pre-registration nurses completed the SAMI in their second week of study and again in Week 11. This provided the opportunity to assess the SAMI as a means of stimulating students towards self-regulation and form self-feedback mechanisms. A measure of constructive friction, dissonance or ambivalence is created in the SAMI by asking students to consider how well they have been doing with their current study regime, how well they could potentially do if they tried their hardest, drawing students to consider aspects of how they learn and reflect on the organisation of their study routines. These measures within the SAMI provide the basis from which students complete questions structured by tutors and construct useful self-feedback. In the current paper, the aim is to confirm the outcomes of previous studies that have found a link between student completion of the SAMI and performance and to investigate whether this quantitative finding is accompanied by autonomous use of experiential feedback students had of themselves (self-feedback) to initiate, monitor and control changes of study approach. The results of a mixed-method approach indicate that students undertook self-regulated change and had the self-efficacy to understand they could succeed in making changes and in attaining their academic goals.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Duffy, T.
Houston, M.
Rimmer, R.
spellingShingle Duffy, T.
Houston, M.
Rimmer, R.
Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
author_facet Duffy, T.
Houston, M.
Rimmer, R.
author_sort Duffy, T.
title Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
title_short Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
title_full Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
title_fullStr Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
title_full_unstemmed Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
title_sort qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (sami): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning
publishDate 2012
url http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/73993/
http://www.reflectingeducation.net/index.php/reflecting/article/view/105
genre sami
genre_facet sami
op_relation Duffy, T., Houston, M. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/9789.html> and Rimmer, R. (2012) Qualitative analysis of a self administered motivational instrument (SAMI): promoting self-feedback, self-efficacy and self-regulated learning. Reflecting Education <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/journal_volume/Reflecting_Education.html>, 8(1), pp. 32-56.
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