TY - JOUR
T1 - An education in awareness
T2 - Self, motivation, and self-regulated learning in contemplative perspective
AU - Roeser, Robert W.
AU - Peck, Stephen C.
N1 - Funding Information:
The two authors contributed equally to this work. The first author wishes to thank members of the Mind and Life Education Research Network and The Impact Foundation for their support of this work. The second author wishes to acknowledge the support of his contributions to this work by grants from NICHD (#R01 HD048970) and the William T. Grant Foundation (#6791). Thanks also to Gale Sinatra, Avi Kaplan, Hanoch Flum, and numerous anonymous reviewers who offered helpful comments on drafts of this article.
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Consistent with the aims of this special issue, we present a systems perspective on self/identity, predicated on William James's classic distinction between I and Me, and use this perspective to explore conceptual relations between self/identity, motivation to learn, and self-regulated learning. We define the I self functionally in terms of the capacity for the conscious shifting and sustaining of awareness. The I is conceived of as that aspect of the self-system that affords the potential for the conscious and willful, rather than the non-conscious and automatic, motivation and regulation of behavior. We introduce contemplative education as a set of pedagogical practices designed to cultivate conscious awareness in an ethical-relational context in which the values of personal growth, learning, moral living, and caring for others are nurtured. We discuss the implications of contemplative education for the cultivation of conscious and willful forms of learning and living among students and educators alike.
AB - Consistent with the aims of this special issue, we present a systems perspective on self/identity, predicated on William James's classic distinction between I and Me, and use this perspective to explore conceptual relations between self/identity, motivation to learn, and self-regulated learning. We define the I self functionally in terms of the capacity for the conscious shifting and sustaining of awareness. The I is conceived of as that aspect of the self-system that affords the potential for the conscious and willful, rather than the non-conscious and automatic, motivation and regulation of behavior. We introduce contemplative education as a set of pedagogical practices designed to cultivate conscious awareness in an ethical-relational context in which the values of personal growth, learning, moral living, and caring for others are nurtured. We discuss the implications of contemplative education for the cultivation of conscious and willful forms of learning and living among students and educators alike.
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U2 - 10.1080/00461520902832376
DO - 10.1080/00461520902832376
M3 - Article
C2 - 20419040
AN - SCOPUS:72449180400
SN - 0046-1520
VL - 44
SP - 119
EP - 136
JO - Educational Psychologist
JF - Educational Psychologist
IS - 2
ER -