Journal ArticleParallel publicationPublished versionDOI: 10.48548/pubdata-2825

A conceptual impact model of digital support for student self-regulation and emotion regulation grounded in Self-Determination Theory

Chronological data

Date of first publication2025-10-02
Date of publication in PubData 2026-01-14

Language of the resource

English

Related external resources

Variant form of DOI: 10.1007/s44217-025-00825-8
Stalmach, A., Reinck, C., D’Elia, P., Di Sano, S., & Casale, G. (2025). A conceptual impact model of digital support for student self-regulation and emotion regulation grounded in Self-Determination Theory. Discover Education, 4(1), Article 383
Published in ISSN: 2731-5525
Discover Education

Abstract

Abstract We present a conceptual impact model illustrating how digital tools can facilitate the fulfillment of basic psychological needs, autonomy, competence and relatedness, which in turn may foster improvements in self-regulation and emotion regulation. The model incorporates features of digital tools such as personalized learning paths, real-time feedback mechanisms, progress tracking, reward systems, gamification, targeted interventions and community support, illustrating how these elements address one or more basic psychological needs. These are further complemented by AI-specific mechanisms such as adaptivity, intelligent feedback and automated social presence. The model demonstrates that fulfilling the need for competence and autonomy may influence self-regulation, while relatedness - emotion regulation, which can consequently enhance mental health. Learner traits, such as computational thinking abilities, alongside contextual factors like technical infrastructure, shape how students engage with and benefit from digital tools. The claims and future directions are discussed.

Keywords

Digital Tools; Self-determination Theory; Basic Psychological Needs; Impact Model

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More information

DDC

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Research