The relationship between teachers' cue-utilization and their monitoring accuracy of students' text comprehension

We investigated to what extent teachers' use of diagnostic cues and the accuracy with which they interpreted or judged the values of those cues affected teachers' monitoring accuracy. Forty-six secondary education teachers judged the text comprehension of six students (216 students in tota...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Teaching and teacher education Vol. 107; p. 103482
Main Authors: van de Pol, Janneke, van Gog, Tamara, Thiede, Keith
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Ltd 01-11-2021
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Summary:We investigated to what extent teachers' use of diagnostic cues and the accuracy with which they interpreted or judged the values of those cues affected teachers' monitoring accuracy. Forty-six secondary education teachers judged the text comprehension of six students (216 students in total). Mere use of diagnostic cues appeared not sufficient. Rather, accurately judging the values of a diagnostic performance cue was related to higher monitoring accuracy. Using non-diagnostic student cues hampered teachers' monitoring accuracy. The key to further improve monitoring accuracy might lie in improving teachers’ ability to accurately judge diagnostic cues and help them ignore non-diagnostic cues. •Teachers' monitoring accuracy of their students' text comprehension was investigated.•Performance cues, student cues, and task cues were available during monitoring.•Mere use of diagnostic cues was not sufficient to promote teachers' monitoring accuracy.•Using non-diagnostic student cues (e.g., students' extraversion) hampered teachers' monitoring accuracy.•Accurately judging the values of one of the diagnostic cues increased teachers' monitoring accuracy.
Bibliography:erratum
ISSN:0742-051X
1879-2480
DOI:10.1016/j.tate.2021.103482