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Meta programmes for identifying thinking preferences and their impact on accounting students' educational experience [An article from: Journal of Accounting Education]

Author N. Brown
Publisher Elsevier
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Book Details
Author(s)N. Brown
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR2NLU
ISBN-13978B000RR2NL6
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
Sales Rank12,728,390
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This digital document is a journal article from Journal of Accounting Education, published by Elsevier in 2005. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
Meta programmes are a way of indicating unconscious thinking preferences that influence how a person perceives the world, and how that person behaves and communicates with others. Meta programmes provide an easily understood language that can facilitate an understanding on the part of accounting students and faculty, of metacognitive processes, an important pre-requisite to developing the skill of learning to learn. This paper reports the results of an interview-based study which identifies 11 meta programmes important to the specific context of students' educational experience. Meta programmes are found to affect the ability/inability of certain students to manage the educational process, a result that improves our understanding of why some students are better at coping with the demands of higher education than others. Since meta programmes are considered to operate at an unconscious or metacognitive level, raising awareness of their thinking and learning styles offers students the opportunity to influence, or change, their own cognitive processes involved in learning and therefore to enhance that learning. An increased understanding on the part of accounting faculty of their own and their students' meta programmes offers potential for improving communication with students and designing more effective teaching and feedback strategies.