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Learning Processes and Academic Achievement among Secondary School Students in Barbados

Authors:
Jason Emile Marshall, Donna-Maria Maynard, Rasheda Marshall

Abstract

This study investigates the influence of learning processes on student achievement. One hundred and thirty-four students from eight secondary schools in Barbados were purposively selected and surveyed using the Inventory of Learning Processes (ILP; Schmeck, Ribich, & Ramanaiah, 1977) subscales: fact retention, study methods, elaborative processing, and deep processing. The results indicate that the elaborative processing subscale was the only measure that was significantly related to student achievement in the sample. No significant differences emerged between high and low-achieving students in terms of the learning processes they employ. The findings suggest the importance of using higher-order learning strategies to facilitate academic success

Keywords: academic achievement deep processing inventory of learning processes learning styles high-achieving low-achieving
DOI: https://doi.ms/10.00420/ms/1470/8K8H5/ZOE | Volume: 8 | Issue: 1 | Views: 0
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