Teachers are increasingly prioritising self-regulation in their classrooms â but what does the research say about developing it in your pupils?
Share
What is self-regulation?
/magazine/tes-explains/what-self-regulation
Self-regulation is the ability to adjust and control your own energy levels, emotions, behaviour and attention.Ěý
Self-regulated learning can be broken down into three essential components:
Cognition:Ěýthe mental process involved in knowing, understandingĚýand learning.
Metacognition:Ěýoften defined as ââlearning to learnâ.
Motivation:Ěýwillingness to engage our metacognitive and cognitive skills.
Ěý
How does it work in the classroom?
According to Sara Baker, a professor of developmental psychology and education at the University of Cambridge, the best way for primary children to develop their self-regulation skills is through giving them opportunities to engage in plenty of high-quality play.Ěý
In research conducted in more than 30 early years settings, Baker found that free-flow activities and small-group work were more effective in encouraging self-regulation than whole-class instruction. Unlike during direct instruction, âin a free-flow situation, youâre interacting with your peers and you have that individualised feedback from adults, so you can adapt and adjust as you go,â she explains.
With older children, Louise Gilbert, a research fellow at Norland College and formerly a research associate at Bath Spa University, recommends a more formal approach: emotion coaching.
Speaking to Tes, she outlined that there are four steps to this process. Firstly, you need to recognise a childâs feelings and empathise with them. Secondly, validate and label those feelings before, thirdly, setting limits on the childâs behaviour if necessary. Finally, problem-solve with the child, helping them to understand what they could do differently next time.
The Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) is an independent charity dedicated to breaking the link between family income and educational achievement.
To achieve this, it summarises the best available evidence for teachers; its Teaching and Learning Toolkit, for example, is used by 70 per cent of secondary schools.
The charity also generates new evidenceĚýof âwhat worksâ to improve teaching and learning, by funding independent evaluations of high-potential projects, and supports teachers and senior leaders to use the evidence to achieve the maximum possible benefit for young people.