Abstract :
Although the Web allows for flexible learning, research has found that
online students tend to lack focus, willingness to participate, confidence, and
discipline. This study thus attempts to promote Web-based self-regulated
learning from the social cognitive perspective, which emphasizes the interactions
among personal, behavioral, and environmental influences.
This study has identified the most significant factors for personal,
behavioral, and environmental influences in the social cognitive model of selfregulated
learning, and also applied this model to the development of the
NetPorts
web-based learning system.
NetPorts
, in turn, allows us to empirically
analyze the interactions between the aforementioned factors. Our Web-based
findings support the social cognitive view of self-regulated learning: students
who hold higher levels of motivation apply more effective strategies, and
respond more appropriately to environmental demands, in the Web-based
learning environment. These findings also further validate the application of
the social cognitive model to Web-based learning through the
NetPorts