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Metacognition

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Title: Metacognition


1
Metacognition
  • SE - Current Issues in Technology Enhanced
    Learning
  • 24.05.2005
  • Monika Pilgerstorfer

2
Metacognition
  • Thinking about thinking
  • (Blakely, 1990 Livingston, 1997)
  • Flavell (1977)
  • Child cognition
  • Developmental changes in
  • Metamemory
  • Metacomprehension
  • Metacommunication

3
Metacognition
  • Knowledge and active control over ones own
    cognitive processes when engaged in learning
  • metacognitive knowledge
  • metacognitive regulation

4
Metacognitive Knowledge
  • Knowledge about human learning and information
    processing
  • Knowledge about the learning task at hand and its
    corresponding processing demands
  • Knowledge about cognitive and metacognitive
    strategies and their appropriate use

5
Metacognitive Regulation
  • processes that can be applied in order to control
    cognitive activities and achieve cognitive goals
  • planning and monitoring cognitive activities and
    further revision depending on the result of these
    activities

6
Elements of Metacognition
  • Metamemory
  • Knowledge about memory systems and memory
    strategies
  • Metacomprehension
  • Learners awareness about what he/she knows /
    does not know

7
Elements of Metacognition
  • Self-regulation
  • Learners adjustment to errors
  • Covers social interaction
  • Schema Training
  • Helps learners to develop their own cognitive
    structures from understanding information and
    experiences

8
Metacognition
  • Students perception of themselves has an impact
    of their performance, achievements and
    self-management of their own learning.
  • Metacognition influences the students
    orientation to learning tasks and problem
    solving.
  • Performing the task or solving the problem
    influences their belief in their personal and
    academic abilities, therefore metacognition
    allows students to believe in themselves.

9
Metacognitive Strategies
  • Blakely Spence (1990)
  • Connecting new information to former knowledge
  • Selecting thinking strategies deliberately
  • Planning, monitoring and evaluating thinking
    processes
  • ? Utilising these strategies a learner can
    identify a problem, research alternative
    solutions, evaluate and decide on a final
    solution.

10
Metacognitive Strategies
  • Macpherson (2002)
  • Metacognitive explanation
  • Scaffolded instruction
  • Cognitive choaching
  • Head-to-hands
  • Co-operative learning

11
Metacognitive Explanation
  • Involves the teacher
  • Talking through the problem, start to ask the
    student for suggestions
  • Thinking aloud
  • Observing the process of solving a problem

12
Scaffolded Instruction
  • Exploring problems with little help from the
    teacher
  • Teachers role is to support
  • Teacher should intervene if the student is
    experiencing difficulties
  • What do you think would happen if?
  • How can you check to see if you are correct or
    not?

13
Cognitive Choaching
  • Teacher prompts student from solution
  • Students are encouraged to explain what he/she
    did to the other students
  • On-going assessment of students performance
  • Students are challenged to achieve new goals with
    different levels of difficulty

14
Co-operative Learning
  • Utilises the social aspect of learning
  • Breaking the class into pairs or small groups

15
Head-to-Hands
  • Carry out a practical application
  • Manipulate and test learning
  • Helps students maintain motivation towards their
    learning

16
Metacognition in E-Learning
  • Sucess of learning environments turns on the
    dynamic relation between learner and environment
  • How well students interact with their environment
  • How well they read documents
  • How well they explore concepts, facts,
    illustrations
  • How well they monitor progress
  • How well they accept help

17
Metacognition in E-Learning
  • Metacognition is associated with the activities
    and skills related to planning, monitoring,
    evaluating and repairing performance.
  • External ressources for help
  • Visual design can improve metacognition

18
Metacognition in E-Learning (Kirsh, 2004)
  • Metacognition is a type of situated cognition.
  • it works by controlling the interaction of person
    and world
  • it is a component in the dynamic coupling of
    student and environment
  • controlled by biasing what one looks at
  • controlled by what one does in a motor sense
  • sophisticated, concerned with managing schedules,
    checklists, notes and annotations
  • Metacognition is interactive!

19
Metacognition in E-Learning (Kirsh, 2004)
  • The rhetoric of metacognition is about internal
    regulation but the practice of designers focuses
    on external resources.
  • Metacognition recruits internal processes but
    relies at skills that are oriented to controlling
    outside mechanisms!
  • Good visual designs are cognitively efficient.
  • The cognitive effort involved in metacognitive
    activity is not different in princible than the
    cognitive effort involved in first order
    cognition.
  • The way visual cues are distributed effects the
    cognitive effort required to notice what is
    important.

20
Metacognition in E-Learning (Kirsh, 2004)
  • Good visual design supports helpful workflow.
  • Learners need to plan, monitor and evluate their
    progress
  • In well set up environments students will develop
    expectations of the kind of information to be had
    when engaged in a task, such as solving a
    problem.
  • Good visual design is about designing cue
    structure.

21
A Distributed View of Metacognition
  • ? Managing ressources
  • Processes involved in internal cognitive
    functioning
  • Objects and processes in ones immediate
    environment

22
A Distributed View of Metacognition 5 tenets
  1. The complexity of deciding what to do next is
    made considerably less complex than the general
    problem of rational choice.
  2. Humans lean on environmental structure for
    cognitive support.

23
A Distributed View of Metacognition 5 tenets
  1. We are closely coupled causally with our
    environments that cognition is effectively
    distributed over mind and environment.
  2. Our close causal coupling holds true at different
    temporal levels.
  3. Learners are coordinators locked in a system.

24
A Distributed View of Metacognition
  • For students operating in well designed
    environments the activity of maintaining
    coordination, of monitoring, repairing, and
    deciding what to do next may not be a fully
    concious process, and certainly need not require
    attention to ones current internal thinking
    process.

25
A Distributed View of Metacognition
  • Cognition is distributed between agent and
    environment
  • ? When there is conscious awareness of mental
    activity, the aspect of cognition being attended
    to may be the externalisation of that thought.

26
Cognitively Effective Design
  • Principles of good pedagogy
  • Providing cues, prompts, hints, indicators and
    reminders
  • The manner of displaying them has an effect on
    how and when students notice them.

27
Cognitively Effective Design
28
Cognitively Effective Design
  • The effectiveness of a structure or process
    measures the probability that subjects will
    comprehend, perceive, extract the meaning, or use
    the structure correctly.
  • a) use the interface, hence not reject it
    outright as being too complex to be useful
  • b) use the display to obtain the result the users
    want because the display makes it easier to
    understand the options and their relations better

29
Personal Learning Management (Foroughi , 2005)
  • The organizer
  • Information on self progress
  • Search tool for suitable content and assessment
    modules
  • Emulating presence through a talking avatar

30
Blooming E-Learning
  • Adapting Blooms Taxonomy into the content of
    e-learning course to promote life long learning
    through Metacognition.
  • University of Dublin
  • Trinity College

31
Blooming E-Learning
  • E-learning course developed as a web site
  • Introduction to HTML
  • Skills and knowledge to produce a web site
  • Recognise current metacognitive skills and
    enhance them
  • Blooms taxonomy
  • Metacognitive instructional approaches

32
Blooming E-Learning
  • Blooms taxonomy (Bloom, 1956)
  • Can be used as a means by which teachers and
    students can be introduced to metacognition.

33
Blooming E-Learning
  • E-Learning course
  • 6 chapter
  • Each chapter incorporates one of Blooms
    educational objectives
  • Each chapter incorporates one of the
    metacognitive instructional approaches by
    Macpherson (2002)
  • Metacognitive explanation
  • Scaffolded instruction
  • Cognitive choaching
  • Head to Hands
  • Co-operative learning

34
Blooming E-Learning
  • Chapter 1 - Introduction
  • Content displayed as web pages
  • Bloom knowledge
  • Exercise recall
  • Chapter 2 - Text
  • Learners can enter text, format it into headings,
    paragraphs, lists, etc.
  • Bloom comprehension
  • Exercise Hot Potatoes

35
Blooming E-Learning
  • Chapter 3 - Links
  • Add links to page
  • Bloom application
  • Exercise create web page
  • Metacognitive explanation
  • Chapter 4 Images
  • Insert images
  • Bloom analysis
  • Exercise view an existing web page and pick out
    the elements and tags that make it up
  • Co-operative learning

36
Blooming E-Learning
  • Chapter 5 Tables
  • Bloom synthesis
  • Exercise Link two web pages
  • Heads-to-Hand
  • Chapter 6 Forms and Design
  • Bloom evaluation
  • Exercise create a form and add some elements
  • Scaffold instruction

37
Blooming E-Learning
  • Evaluation
  • Metacognitive knowledge monitoring assessment
    (Tobias Everson, 1996)
  • Predication for success with actual successful
    performance
  • Predication for failure with actual unsuccessful
    performance
  • Predication for failure with actual successful
    performance
  • Predication for success with actual unsuccessful
    performance

38
Blooming E-Learning
  • Lack of measures for general megacognition
  • ? Reduced the overall assessment to the
    metacognitive strategies

39
Blooming E-Learning
  • Course incorporated metacognitive skills
  • Content received good feedback
  • Benefit, helped learn HTML

40
Resources
  • http//interactivity.ucsd.edu/articles/Metacogniti
    on/Elearning10.pdf
  • https//www.cs.tcd.ie/courses/mscitedu/mite_wrk/re
    sources/portfolios/2001/doyle_e/Final.rtf
  • http//fie.engrng.pitt.edu/fie2005/papers/1321.pdf
  • http//www.learningcircuits.org/2003/oct2003/dobro
    volny.htm
  • Schwartz, N.H., Andersen, C., Hong, N., Howard,
    B., McGee, S. (2004). The influence of
    metacognitive skills on learners memory of
    information in a hypermedia environment. Journal
    of Educational Computing Research, 31, 7793.

41
  • Thank You For Your Attention
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