What Is Metacognition
What Is Metacognition
What Is Metacognition
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During the planning phase, learners think about the learning goal the
teacher has set and consider how they will approach the task and
which strategies they will use. At this stage, it is helpful for learners to
ask themselves:
Students might decide to make changes to the strategies they are using
if these are not working. As students work through the task, it will help
them to ask themselves:
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‘Is the strategy that I am using working?’
‘Do I need to try something different?’
A key challenge for teachers is being able to recognize how well their
students understand their own learning processes.
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David Perkins (1992) defined four levels of metacognitive learners
which provide a useful framework for teachers:
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“Too often, we teach students what to think
but not how to think.”
- OECD Insights (2014)
Metacognitive practices are useful for all learners from primary level
upwards. Using metacognition improves students’ academic
achievement across learning domains. Metacognitive skills help
students to transfer what they have learnt from one context to another
or from a previous task to a new task. This includes reading and text
comprehension, writing, mathematics, reasoning and problem-solving,
and memorizing.
Students can use their metacognitive skills and strategies, not just
inside the classroom in front of the teacher, but in any setting.
Source: https://cambridge-community.org.uk/professional-development/gswmeta/index.html
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