Metacognitive Cues, Working Memory, and Math Anxiety: The Regulated Attention in Mathematical Problem Solving (RAMPS) Framework

被引:4
作者
Scheibe, Daniel A. A. [1 ]
Was, Christopher A. A. [1 ]
Dunlosky, John [1 ]
Thompson, Clarissa A. A. [1 ]
机构
[1] Kent State Univ, Psychol Sci, Kent, OH 44240 USA
关键词
metacognition; working memory; math anxiety; mathematical problem solving; state math anxiety; metacognitive experiences; SELF-EFFICACY; ARITHMETIC PERFORMANCE; EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONS; JUDGMENTS; MODEL; METAANALYSIS; ACHIEVEMENT; INTUITION; PRESSURE; FEELINGS;
D O I
10.3390/jintelligence11060117
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Mathematical problem solving is a process involving metacognitive (e.g., judging progress), cognitive (e.g., working memory), and affective (e.g., math anxiety) factors. Recent research encourages researchers who study math cognition to consider the role that the interaction between metacognition and math anxiety plays in mathematical problem solving. Problem solvers can make many metacognitive judgments during a math problem, ranging from global judgments such as, "Do I care to solve this problem?" to minor cue-based judgments such as, "Is my current strategy successful in making progress toward the correct solution?" Metacognitive monitoring can hinder accurate mathematical problem solving when the monitoring is task-irrelevant; however, task-relevant metacognitive experiences can lead to helpful control decisions in mathematical problem solving such as checking work, considering plausibility of an answer, and considering alternate strategies. Worry and negative thoughts (i.e., math anxiety) can both interfere with the accuracy of metacognitive experiences as cues in mathematical problem solving and lead to avoidance of metacognitive control decisions that could otherwise improve performance. The current paper briefly reviews and incorporates prior literature with current qualitative reports (n = 673) to establish a novel framework of regulated attention in mathematical problem solving (RAMPS).
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页数:18
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