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Metacognition: Supporting a
Thinking Classroom
Connie Wehmeyer, Ph.D.
24
+ 43
Cognition- knowledge or skill to carry out a
task.
Objectives:
1. What is metacognition?
2. How do I teach my students
about metacognition?
3. What metacognitive strategies
should I use?
Student Metacognitive Strategies
Which statement best describes you? Assess yourself.
I am a Novice
I am just starting to learn this and I don’t really understand it yet.
I am an Apprentice
I am starting to get it, but I still need someone to coach me through it.
I am a Practitioner
I can mostly do it myself, but I sometime mess up or get stuck.
I am an Expert
I understand it well and I could thoroughly teach it to someone else.
Learners can think before they enter a
classroom.
Educator’s role is to teach them to think in
different ways and to think more effectively.
Under NCLB
 Teachers and students approached content, not as a
mode of thinking, not as a system for thought, or even as
a system of thought, but rather as a sequence of stuff to
be routinely "covered" and committed to memory.
 Consequences: no basis for intellectual growth, no
deep structures of knowledge formed, no basis for long
term grasp and control.
Common Core Standards
The Common Core Standards require students to
think and communicate their thinking in order to
demonstrate understanding of complex text, and
conceptual mathematics.
Why: Confronted with Real World
Problems
So, what can teachers do to support
student thinking?
Problem Solvers
Critical Thinkers
Precise
Persevere
Think with others
Utilize limited resources
01/30/19
12
Engaging
Thinking For All
Students
Collaboration
Data Analysis
Management
Learning Strategies
Target
Tezella G. Cline, 2006
Embed within our
Instructional Model?
Teach all students
Metacognitive Strategies
What is Metacognition?
 http://
www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=mVE21QhY-lI
What is Metacognition?
“thinking about your thinking”
Our ability to know what we know and what we do not know; how I think;
and what helps me learn.
Person variables: What one recognizes about his or her strengths and
weaknesses in learning and processing information.
Task variables: What one knows or can figure out about the nature of a
task and the processing demands required to complete the task.
Strategy variables: The strategies a person has “at the ready” to apply in
a flexible way to successfully accomplish a task;
For example: “I know that I (person variable) have difficulty with word
problems (task variable), so I will answer the computational problems first
and save the word problems for last (strategy variable).”
What is Metacognition?
“how to regulate your thinking”
What I do to help me think and learn:
plan a strategy for producing what information is
needed
monitor the steps and strategies during the action
of problem solving; and
reflect on and evaluate the productiveness of our
own thinking.
(Dirkes,1985)
Who practices Metacognition?
 Plan the lesson (content, instructional strategy,
checking for understanding) to keep you on track.
 Monitoring the plan over a period of time –to make
adjustments.
 Reflect back to make judgments
 Evaluate the plan upon its
completion to determine
future changes.
Who else?
Not everyone
 50% to 66% of the world’s population engage in
metacognition
John Flavell, 1979
 Some children have no ideas of what they should
do when they confront a problem and are often
unable to explain their strategies of decision making
Sternberg and Wagner, 1982
The result of not thinking before we
attempt to solve real world problems
Not everyone
Teacher asks
“How did you solve that problem?
“ What strategies did you have in mind?
“Tell us what went on in your head to come up with that
conclusion?
“What part do you not understand?
Student response “I don’t know, I just did it.”
“ Students without metacognitive
approaches are essentially
learners without direction or
opportunity to review their
progress, accomplishments, and
future directions.”
O’Mally, Chamot, Stewner-Mazanaares, Russo, & Kupper,
1985, p.56
Benefits to Students with Learning Disabilities
 When metacognitive strategies are explicitly taught they
can support students information retrieval. (Lenz, Ellis, &
Scanlon, 1996).
 Moreover, students possess a powerful learning tool that
builds learning independence. Confronted with a
problem-solving situation, students can implement
metacognitive strategies when they have difficulty
remembering how to solve a particular problem.
 As students learn, practice, and independently use
metacognitive strategies, these strategies often become
integrated into these students’ learning repertoires.
(Mercer & Mercer, 1993
Reading Comprehension and
Metacognition
Awareness and monitoring
are in itself what it means to be
metacognitive during the
process of reading.
Reading Task
Reading a passage and our minds wander from the
pages. We see the words but no meaning is being
produced. Suddenly we realize that we are not
concentrating and that we've lost contact with the
meaning of the text. How do we recover?
The inner awareness and the strategy of recovery are
components of metacognition.
What do you do? Who taught you to do those
things?
Capacities of a Literate Individual
1. They demonstrate independence.
2. They build strong content knowledge.
3. They respond to the varying demands of
audience, task, purpose, and discipline.
4. They comprehend as well as critique.
5. They value evidence.
6. They use technology and digital media
strategically and capably.
7. They come to understand other perspectives and
cultures.
The National Reading Panel (National
Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, 2000),
 Effectiveness of systematic direct instruction of
multiple metacognitive strategies designed to
assist students in comprehending of expository
text and vocabulary.
 Binomial Effect Size Display
40% difference in gains in vocabulary between
the two groups and a 20% difference in gains in
reading comprehension in just five weeks.
Visible Learning For Teaching
John Hattie rank orders factors that have
the greatest effect size in student
achievement.
Meta-cognitive strategies taught and
used have an effect size of .69
How do we teach students to use metacognition?
Teach the Metacognitive Process:
Plan for thinking
Clear about the task
Determine strategies: graphic organizer, take
notes, draw a picture or diagram, identify what
you already know
Set goals
Determine a sequence
Set deadlines
Identify possible distract actions
Determine how to overcome distractions
Metacognitive Process:
Monitor and adjust plan: Am I
making progress on the task
thinking about the learning and identify the
problem
comprehending what I read or is said and
identify the problem if you are not
making adjusts to help me
Metacognitive Process:
Self Reflect and Evaluate : How well did I
accomplish my task
manage my time
stay on task
use strategies to help me
Behaviors and Disposition of Successful Students:
Using Metacognitive Strategies
Read closely to determine what the text
says explicitly and to make logical
inferences from it; cite specific textual
evidence when writing or speaking to
support conclusions drawn from the text.
College and Career Anchor Standard
for Reading 1
Process Steps
support
Metacognition
Preparing for an exam
Post- Exam
Reflection
of Exam
Preparation
Direct Instruction of Strategies
Many researchers have tried
to foster better
metacognition and
comprehension through
direct instruction of strategies
(Paris, Wasik, & Turner, 1991).
What can teachers do?
Metacognitive strategies
Teacher action that prepares students for learning
or elaboration through self-reflection regarding
what was learned.
Teacher modeling of problem solving steps
Think-pair-share
Goal setting
Journal Writing
Activation of Prior Knowledge
Cues and Questions
Flavell, J. H. (1979). Metacognition and cognitive monitoring: A new area of cognitive-developmental inquiry.
American Psychologist, 34, 906-911.
Metacognitive Strategies
 Brainstorming
 Webbing
 Task-specific graphic
organizers
 Think Aloud Problem
Solving-- Self-
questioning
 Debate
 Role Play
 Story map
 Story retelling
 Story frame
 Semantic mapping
Graphic Organizers
A graphic organizer for students to use as they are
doing a project (KWL)
K
What I Know
W
What I Want to Learn
L
What I Have Learned
Student Metacognitive Strategies
Which statement best describes you? Assess yourself.
I am a Novice
I am just starting to learn this and I don’t really understand it yet.
I am an Apprentice
I am starting to get it, but I still need someone to coach me through
it.
I am a Practitioner
I can mostly do it myself, but I sometime mess up or get stuck.
I am an Expert
I understand it well and I could thoroughly teach it to someone else.
Thinking Maps
Tree Map
Think A loud
One of the most effective way to teach
metacognitive strategies is the think-aloud.
This involves teacher talking the class
through his/her thinking as he/she tackles a
task, like a piece of text with new
vocabulary or a new math concept.
Modeling Metacognition with Students
  
Predict
 What do the pictures tell me about what I will read?
 What do the heading tell me about what I will read?
 What do I predict is the author’s purpose?
Summarize
 So far, I know this about what I read:
 I think I will read more about __________ as I continue to
read.
 I think what might happen next in this text is ….
Connect
 Does this remind me of something I already know?
 How does this fit into what I already read so far?
Modeling Metacognition with Students
  
Clarify
 I didn’t understand …. , so I reread, figured it out, and
read on and now I know what it means /how it
connects.
Visualize
The main thing I see on the page is ….
 I can draw or represent this concept in another way that
makes sense to me.
Modeling Metacognition with Students
 Question
I am wondering about
I need someone to help me understand…
Something I will ask my teacher or another student to
clarify is….
Evaluate
As a result of reading, I know these three things about
what I read.
As a result of taking notes, I can explain these concepts.
THINK ALOUD
PROBLEM SOLVING
Pose challenging problems then:
Invite students to describe their plans and
strategies for solving the problem.
Share their thinking as they are implementing
their plan.
Reflect on/evaluate the effectiveness of their
strategy.
Foods
 http://
www.youtube.com/watch?v=0GksvunWPEk&list=PLmOKj_YOWrC0HINNUYO9Ve6Ta
Cooperative Learning
Cooperative leaning is an effective method
for metacognitive exchanges as students
discuss and interact in a shared reading
environment. It provides opportunities to
reduce anxiety, and provide positive
support among peers. (Paris et al., 1990;
1991).
Teacher Questioning: prompt students to
think about their task and how they're doing
1. Describe what kind of thinking you did
2. Describe how you did your thinking
3. Evaluate your thinking
4. Check for accuracy
5. Data Gathering Questions
6. Reflective and Reasoning Questions
adapted from Schwartz & Parks (1994)
Metacognitive Thinking Questions
Student Statement
The answer is 36
dollars, 7 cents
I am comparing…
I am ready to begin
writing
Teacher Response
"Describe the steps you
took to arrive at that
answer.”
"What goes on in your
head when you
compare?“
"Describe your plan of
action."
Evaluate the Curriculum: What kinds of
thinking did your curriculum unit require?
 How did you encourage your students’ thinking about their
thinking?
 Did you include ways for students to regulate and monitor
their own learning in your plans? For example, were students
asked to articulate their learning process and what they had
learned?
 Did students share strategies and solutions with each other?
 Did students have opportunities for revision and for self- or
peer assessment?
 What aspects of the unfolding events increased or
decreased the opportunity for students to reflect on and
regulate their learning in this learning event?
 How do you think this may have influenced what occurred?

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Metacognition training ppt

  • 1. Metacognition: Supporting a Thinking Classroom Connie Wehmeyer, Ph.D.
  • 2.
  • 3. 24 + 43 Cognition- knowledge or skill to carry out a task.
  • 4. Objectives: 1. What is metacognition? 2. How do I teach my students about metacognition? 3. What metacognitive strategies should I use?
  • 5. Student Metacognitive Strategies Which statement best describes you? Assess yourself. I am a Novice I am just starting to learn this and I don’t really understand it yet. I am an Apprentice I am starting to get it, but I still need someone to coach me through it. I am a Practitioner I can mostly do it myself, but I sometime mess up or get stuck. I am an Expert I understand it well and I could thoroughly teach it to someone else.
  • 6. Learners can think before they enter a classroom. Educator’s role is to teach them to think in different ways and to think more effectively.
  • 7. Under NCLB  Teachers and students approached content, not as a mode of thinking, not as a system for thought, or even as a system of thought, but rather as a sequence of stuff to be routinely "covered" and committed to memory.  Consequences: no basis for intellectual growth, no deep structures of knowledge formed, no basis for long term grasp and control.
  • 8. Common Core Standards The Common Core Standards require students to think and communicate their thinking in order to demonstrate understanding of complex text, and conceptual mathematics.
  • 9. Why: Confronted with Real World Problems
  • 10. So, what can teachers do to support student thinking? Problem Solvers Critical Thinkers Precise Persevere Think with others Utilize limited resources
  • 11.
  • 12. 01/30/19 12 Engaging Thinking For All Students Collaboration Data Analysis Management Learning Strategies Target Tezella G. Cline, 2006 Embed within our Instructional Model? Teach all students Metacognitive Strategies
  • 13. What is Metacognition?  http:// www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=mVE21QhY-lI
  • 14. What is Metacognition? “thinking about your thinking” Our ability to know what we know and what we do not know; how I think; and what helps me learn. Person variables: What one recognizes about his or her strengths and weaknesses in learning and processing information. Task variables: What one knows or can figure out about the nature of a task and the processing demands required to complete the task. Strategy variables: The strategies a person has “at the ready” to apply in a flexible way to successfully accomplish a task; For example: “I know that I (person variable) have difficulty with word problems (task variable), so I will answer the computational problems first and save the word problems for last (strategy variable).”
  • 15. What is Metacognition? “how to regulate your thinking” What I do to help me think and learn: plan a strategy for producing what information is needed monitor the steps and strategies during the action of problem solving; and reflect on and evaluate the productiveness of our own thinking. (Dirkes,1985)
  • 16. Who practices Metacognition?  Plan the lesson (content, instructional strategy, checking for understanding) to keep you on track.  Monitoring the plan over a period of time –to make adjustments.  Reflect back to make judgments  Evaluate the plan upon its completion to determine future changes.
  • 18. Not everyone  50% to 66% of the world’s population engage in metacognition John Flavell, 1979  Some children have no ideas of what they should do when they confront a problem and are often unable to explain their strategies of decision making Sternberg and Wagner, 1982
  • 19. The result of not thinking before we attempt to solve real world problems
  • 20. Not everyone Teacher asks “How did you solve that problem? “ What strategies did you have in mind? “Tell us what went on in your head to come up with that conclusion? “What part do you not understand? Student response “I don’t know, I just did it.”
  • 21. “ Students without metacognitive approaches are essentially learners without direction or opportunity to review their progress, accomplishments, and future directions.” O’Mally, Chamot, Stewner-Mazanaares, Russo, & Kupper, 1985, p.56
  • 22. Benefits to Students with Learning Disabilities  When metacognitive strategies are explicitly taught they can support students information retrieval. (Lenz, Ellis, & Scanlon, 1996).  Moreover, students possess a powerful learning tool that builds learning independence. Confronted with a problem-solving situation, students can implement metacognitive strategies when they have difficulty remembering how to solve a particular problem.  As students learn, practice, and independently use metacognitive strategies, these strategies often become integrated into these students’ learning repertoires. (Mercer & Mercer, 1993
  • 23. Reading Comprehension and Metacognition Awareness and monitoring are in itself what it means to be metacognitive during the process of reading.
  • 24.
  • 25. Reading Task Reading a passage and our minds wander from the pages. We see the words but no meaning is being produced. Suddenly we realize that we are not concentrating and that we've lost contact with the meaning of the text. How do we recover? The inner awareness and the strategy of recovery are components of metacognition. What do you do? Who taught you to do those things?
  • 26. Capacities of a Literate Individual 1. They demonstrate independence. 2. They build strong content knowledge. 3. They respond to the varying demands of audience, task, purpose, and discipline. 4. They comprehend as well as critique. 5. They value evidence. 6. They use technology and digital media strategically and capably. 7. They come to understand other perspectives and cultures.
  • 27. The National Reading Panel (National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, 2000),  Effectiveness of systematic direct instruction of multiple metacognitive strategies designed to assist students in comprehending of expository text and vocabulary.  Binomial Effect Size Display 40% difference in gains in vocabulary between the two groups and a 20% difference in gains in reading comprehension in just five weeks.
  • 28. Visible Learning For Teaching John Hattie rank orders factors that have the greatest effect size in student achievement. Meta-cognitive strategies taught and used have an effect size of .69
  • 29. How do we teach students to use metacognition? Teach the Metacognitive Process: Plan for thinking Clear about the task Determine strategies: graphic organizer, take notes, draw a picture or diagram, identify what you already know Set goals Determine a sequence Set deadlines Identify possible distract actions Determine how to overcome distractions
  • 30. Metacognitive Process: Monitor and adjust plan: Am I making progress on the task thinking about the learning and identify the problem comprehending what I read or is said and identify the problem if you are not making adjusts to help me
  • 31. Metacognitive Process: Self Reflect and Evaluate : How well did I accomplish my task manage my time stay on task use strategies to help me
  • 32. Behaviors and Disposition of Successful Students: Using Metacognitive Strategies
  • 33. Read closely to determine what the text says explicitly and to make logical inferences from it; cite specific textual evidence when writing or speaking to support conclusions drawn from the text. College and Career Anchor Standard for Reading 1
  • 35.
  • 36.
  • 37.
  • 38.
  • 40.
  • 42. Direct Instruction of Strategies Many researchers have tried to foster better metacognition and comprehension through direct instruction of strategies (Paris, Wasik, & Turner, 1991). What can teachers do?
  • 43.
  • 44. Metacognitive strategies Teacher action that prepares students for learning or elaboration through self-reflection regarding what was learned. Teacher modeling of problem solving steps Think-pair-share Goal setting Journal Writing Activation of Prior Knowledge Cues and Questions Flavell, J. H. (1979). Metacognition and cognitive monitoring: A new area of cognitive-developmental inquiry. American Psychologist, 34, 906-911.
  • 45. Metacognitive Strategies  Brainstorming  Webbing  Task-specific graphic organizers  Think Aloud Problem Solving-- Self- questioning  Debate  Role Play  Story map  Story retelling  Story frame  Semantic mapping
  • 46. Graphic Organizers A graphic organizer for students to use as they are doing a project (KWL) K What I Know W What I Want to Learn L What I Have Learned
  • 47. Student Metacognitive Strategies Which statement best describes you? Assess yourself. I am a Novice I am just starting to learn this and I don’t really understand it yet. I am an Apprentice I am starting to get it, but I still need someone to coach me through it. I am a Practitioner I can mostly do it myself, but I sometime mess up or get stuck. I am an Expert I understand it well and I could thoroughly teach it to someone else.
  • 50.
  • 51.
  • 52. Think A loud One of the most effective way to teach metacognitive strategies is the think-aloud. This involves teacher talking the class through his/her thinking as he/she tackles a task, like a piece of text with new vocabulary or a new math concept.
  • 53. Modeling Metacognition with Students    Predict  What do the pictures tell me about what I will read?  What do the heading tell me about what I will read?  What do I predict is the author’s purpose? Summarize  So far, I know this about what I read:  I think I will read more about __________ as I continue to read.  I think what might happen next in this text is …. Connect  Does this remind me of something I already know?  How does this fit into what I already read so far?
  • 54. Modeling Metacognition with Students    Clarify  I didn’t understand …. , so I reread, figured it out, and read on and now I know what it means /how it connects. Visualize The main thing I see on the page is ….  I can draw or represent this concept in another way that makes sense to me.
  • 55. Modeling Metacognition with Students  Question I am wondering about I need someone to help me understand… Something I will ask my teacher or another student to clarify is…. Evaluate As a result of reading, I know these three things about what I read. As a result of taking notes, I can explain these concepts.
  • 56. THINK ALOUD PROBLEM SOLVING Pose challenging problems then: Invite students to describe their plans and strategies for solving the problem. Share their thinking as they are implementing their plan. Reflect on/evaluate the effectiveness of their strategy.
  • 58. Cooperative Learning Cooperative leaning is an effective method for metacognitive exchanges as students discuss and interact in a shared reading environment. It provides opportunities to reduce anxiety, and provide positive support among peers. (Paris et al., 1990; 1991).
  • 59. Teacher Questioning: prompt students to think about their task and how they're doing 1. Describe what kind of thinking you did 2. Describe how you did your thinking 3. Evaluate your thinking 4. Check for accuracy 5. Data Gathering Questions 6. Reflective and Reasoning Questions adapted from Schwartz & Parks (1994)
  • 60. Metacognitive Thinking Questions Student Statement The answer is 36 dollars, 7 cents I am comparing… I am ready to begin writing Teacher Response "Describe the steps you took to arrive at that answer.” "What goes on in your head when you compare?“ "Describe your plan of action."
  • 61.
  • 62.
  • 63. Evaluate the Curriculum: What kinds of thinking did your curriculum unit require?  How did you encourage your students’ thinking about their thinking?  Did you include ways for students to regulate and monitor their own learning in your plans? For example, were students asked to articulate their learning process and what they had learned?  Did students share strategies and solutions with each other?  Did students have opportunities for revision and for self- or peer assessment?  What aspects of the unfolding events increased or decreased the opportunity for students to reflect on and regulate their learning in this learning event?  How do you think this may have influenced what occurred?

Editor's Notes

  1. The term "metacognition" is most often associated with John Flavell, (1979). According to Flavell (1979, 1987), metacognition consists of both metacognitive knowledge and metacognitive experiences or regulation. Metacognitive knowledge refers to acquired knowledge about cognitive processes, knowledge that can be used to control cognitive processes. Flavell further divides metacognitive knowledge into three categories: knowledge of person variables, task variables and strategy variables
  2. Knowledge about one's own cognitive system; essential skill for learning to learn The term "metacognition" is most often associated with John Flavell, (1979). According to Flavell (1979, 1987), metacognition consists of both metacognitive knowledge and metacognitive experiences or regulation. Metacognitive knowledge refers to acquired knowledge about cognitive processes, knowledge that can be used to control cognitive processes. Flavell further divides metacognitive knowledge into three categories: knowledge of person variables, task variables and strategy variables
  3. Knowledge about one's own cognitive system; essential skill for learning to learn
  4. For many students who have learning problems, their inability to efficiently retrieve information previously stored in memory negatively impacts their ability to accurately express what they know.
  5. Refer to your list
  6. This research project took place in six third-grade classrooms in two urban elementary schools in the southwest United States that were deemed demographically and academically equal by the school district's research department. One school was selected as the intervention school and the other school was the comparison school. The students in both schools were pretested before the five-week study and posttested at the end of the study.
  7. the effect size of .40. Anything above such an effect size has more of an impact than just a typical year of academic experience and student growth. And an effect size of 1.0 or better is equivalent to advancing the student’s achievement level by approximately a full grade.
  8. Evaluating work - recognizing strengths and weaknesses of their work helps them to improve Self-assessing - students think about how well they did learning this particular lesson Self-questioning - students ask themselves questions to deepen their understanding during a lesson Selecting strategies - students determine which strategies would be most appropriate for a task Selective thinking - students follow only one determined line of thinking to solve a problem Critiquing - students provide constructive feedback to classmates Revising - students improve their own work after receiving the constructive feedback By showing them how to think about their thinking, teachers change the dialogue in students' heads into a constructive, empowered and problem-solvinbased on the work of Kim Austin, Melissa Cheung, Linda Darling-Hammond and Daisy Martin: g mindset, and this is reflected in their increased success at school.
  9. For teachers to help students become self-regulated learners teachers need to make the students aware of: What the student knows about the subject (use KWL) What is the goal of the lesson or project What are the resources available to the student When is the work to be complete What is the student’s anxiety level (how does the student feel about learning or doing this assignment or taking this test) Monitor Teacher needs to help monitor progress and then to help the students reflect on the assignment What is working – are the students on task Change strategies if needed – give students different strategies if students experiencing difficulty with task Self test on what is being learned – teacher needs to encourage students to self test their knowledge
  10. Teacher Strategies
  11. Posting a list of metacognitive questions on the wall can help to remind children of the sorts of questions they can ask themselves, for example questions that assess awareness of learning (What have you learnt? What have you found out? What did you find hard? What did you do well? What do you need to learn/do next?), assessing attitudes and feelings (What do you like doing/learning? What do you feel good/not good about ...? What do you feel proud of?) and in setting targets (What do you need to do better? What would help you? What are your targets?)