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Metacognitive Strategies
Most powerful predictors of learningis “ thinking about thinking”, “knowing what we know” and “what we don’t know”.
regulates cognitive activity but at the same time needs cognitive activity as vehicle.
Metacognitionwww.dailynews.com THE TEACHERS’ MAGAZINE -July 28, 2014
What is Metacognitive Strategies?
Refers to the methods used to help students understand the way they learn; are processes designed for students to “think” about their “thinking”
Teachers who use metacognitive strategies can positively impact students who have learning disabilities by helping them to develop an APPROPRIATE plan for learning information, which can be memorized and can be an eventual routine...
The basic metacognitive strategies
Connecting new information to former knowledge.
Planning, monitoring and evaluating thinking processes
Selecting thinking strategies deliberately
Before beginning a task
• Set goals; plan the content sequence
• Choose strategies
While working on a task
• Check the on the task
• Check the comprehension
• Check the production
After completing the task
• Assess how well you have accomplish the task
• How well you have used the learning strategies
• Identify changes to be make next time
Process Flow
Plan/Organize Monitor Evaluate
What can you
say about the
following statement ...
“ A THINKING PERSON IS IN
CHARGE OF HER BEHAVIOR”
•She determines when it is necessary to use metacognitive strategies.•She selects strategies to define a problem situation and researches alternative solutions
•She tailors this research for information to constraints time and energy.•She monitors, controls and judges her thinking.
Teachers Question and Answer Portion WORLD EXCLUSIVES
THE
Teachers’ Magazine
“ A THINKING PERSON IS IN CHARGE OF HER BEHAVIOR”
- Learning how to learn, developing a repertoire of thinking processes which can be applied to solve
problems is the Major Goal of Education
CONCEPT OF
METACOGNITION
The concept of Metacognition is viewed as the glue that holds all the thought processes and preferences together.
It refers to the self-reflective process which allows one to monitor one’s own problem-solving skills and self- examine learning preferences.
Flavell and other researchers have divided it into metacognitive skills and metacognitive knowledge...
It is this self-knowledge that is the Goal of the Undergraduate Programs everywhere since it implies not just the “ Learning of Things” but “ Learning how to learn” which is essential to the goal of “lifelong learning”