Metacognition: Nurturing Self-Awareness in the Classroom
The following information has been obtained from a post by Marilyn Price-Mitchell, as published on Edutopia, in April 2015. It discusses strategies how teachers can improve metacognition amongst their students in the classroom.
Strategies That Improve Metacognition
1. Teach students how their brains are wired for growth.
The beliefs that students adopt about learning and their own brains will affect their performance. Research shows that when students develop a growth mindset vs. a fixed mindset, they are more likely to engage in reflective thinking about how they learn and grow. Teaching kids about the science of metacognition can be an empowering tool, helping students to understand how they can literally grow their own brains.
2. Give students practice recognising what they don't understand.
The act of being confused and identifying one's lack of understanding is an important part of developing self-awareness. Take time at the end of a challenging class to ask, "What was most confusing about the material we explored today?" This not only jumpstarts metacognitive processing, but also creates a classroom culture that acknowledges confusion as an integral part of learning.
3. Provide opportunities to reflect on coursework.
Higher-order thinking skills are fostered as students learn to recognize their own cognitive growth. Questions that help this process might include:
- Before this course, I thought earthquakes were caused by _______. Now I understand them to be the result of _______.
- How has my thinking about greenhouse gases changed since taking this course?
- What was easiest for me to learn this week? Why?
- What was most challenging for me to learn? Why?
- What study strategies worked well as I prepared for my exam?
- What strategies for exam preparation didn't work well? What will I do differently next time?
- What study habits worked best for me? How?
- What study habit will I try or improve upon next week?
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