" Can we teach metacognition?
by Ian Carlo Illastron - Saturday, 15 June 2013, 11:38 PM
yes i think we can, its possible,
teacher need to evaluate students response to the tasks given and observe if the student is developing metacognition.
John Flavell, researcher of metacognition, believes kids need awareness in three areas: -
1. An awareness of knowledge — understanding what they know
2. An awareness of thinking — understanding cognitive tasks
3. An awareness of thinking strategies — understanding approaches to directing learning
and to develop awareness, teachers must;
1. Model our own thinking- Kids learn by watching us, Saying your thoughts out loud shows kids what you’re thinking, or “thinking aloud
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2. Scaffold the thinking- Step by step scaffold the learning. We start at the beginning of noticing the thinking strategies, noticing what we know, notice if our strategies worked. We don’t start trying to implement new strategies before we know what we’re currently using as a strategy.
3. Facilitate and provide opportunities to notice thinking -
http://imaginationsoup.net/2012/01/teach-kids-to-think-about-their-thinking-metacognition/"
Image from http://edweb.sdsu.edu/people/bdodge/scaffold/How_To_Scaffold.jpg