Abstract
Primary school is a significant period for the children to learn self-regulatory behaviours. This study aims to help enhance primary school fourth grade curricula to support students’ self-regulation skills. The study employed an explanatory sequential mixed-methods design to collect quantitative data from 1753 students and 86 teachers in 46 primary schools via descriptive and relational surveys, and causal-comparative methods, and qualitative data from 60 stakeholders of primary school curricula (students, family members and teachers) via semi-structured interviews. In conclusion there is no statistically significant relationship between students’ perceptions of their self-regulation skills and instructors’ perceptions of their level of encouraging self-regulation. Self-reflection and seeking help by the student, sustaining self-regulation strategies, serving as a model for children and adoption of a democratic attitude by families, self-regulatory behaviours of peers, cooperation between school and family, and inclusion of self-regulation as an aim in the curriculum are all supporting factors for self-regulation. A student’s expectation of direct instruction, family’s low socioeconomic and cultural levels, teacher’s lack of self-regulation education, spoon-feeding or over interfering the students by teachers, exam-oriented approach for education, and intensive curriculum material are all hindering factors.
Keywords: Self-regulation skills, Primary education, Primary school curriculum, Encouraging self-regulation, Teaching self-regulation
Copyright and license
Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.
How to cite
Ünver, G., Arslan Cansever, B., & Çavaş, P. (2022). Primary School Students’ Perceptions of Self-Regulation Skills and the Supporting and Hindering Factors for Self-Regulation. Education and Science, 47(212), 229-249. https://doi.org/10.15390/EB.2022.11354