Bridging Digital Learning Competence and Academic Achievement: The Roles of Informal Digital Learning and Metacognitive Self-Regulation
Heeyoon Ko

TL;DR
This study explores how digital learning skills lead to better academic performance through informal learning and self-regulation in university students.
Contribution
The study introduces a dynamic view of digital learning competence mediated by informal learning and moderated by metacognitive self-regulation.
Findings
Digital learning competence significantly predicts academic achievement directly and indirectly through informal digital learning engagement.
Metacognitive self-regulation strengthens the conversion of digital learning competence into productive informal learning engagement.
Informal digital learning engagement is a central pathway for translating digital skills into academic outcomes.
Abstract
The author investigates how digital learning competence (DLC) is bridged to academic achievement (AA) through informal digital learning engagement (IDLE) and how meta-cognitive self-regulation (MSR) shapes these pathways among university students. Grounded in a moderated mediation framework, this research conceptualizes DLC not as a static skill set but as a latent capacity that is channeled into academic outcomes when students autonomously engage in digital environments and regulate their cognition. Survey data were collected from 432 undergraduate students and analyzed using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM). The results show that DLC significantly predicts AA both directly and indirectly via IDLE, identifying informal digital learning engagement as a central pathway through which digital learning competence is translated into academic gains. Furthermore,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsImpact of Technology on Adolescents · Digital literacy in education · Innovative Teaching and Learning Methods
