100% tevredenheidsgarantie Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Lees online óf als PDF Geen vaste maandelijkse kosten 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Samenvatting

1.8C Problem 3 Summary

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
1
Pagina's
9
Geüpload op
10-06-2021
Geschreven in
2020/2021

Summary of 1.8C Problem 3 Literature










Oeps! We kunnen je document nu niet laden. Probeer het nog eens of neem contact op met support.

Documentinformatie

Geüpload op
10 juni 2021
Bestand laatst geupdate op
11 juni 2021
Aantal pagina's
9
Geschreven in
2020/2021
Type
Samenvatting

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

1.8C Problem 3
How Do You Monitor Your Learning?

Metacognitive
 Metacognitive knowledge and Regulation
Metacognition- cognition about cognition or thinking about thinking
Artelt and Schnedier- metacognition consists of:
o Knowledge- about our own info-processing capabilities cognitive
tasks you face, strategies needed to cope with tasks
o Skills- involving applying strategies
 Metacognition is higher-order knowledge about thinking, ability to use
knowledge to manage own cognitive processes
Eg. knowing when to skim, what time of day most productive, where to focus,
if you understood, making plans, using strategies, if you studied enough, etc.
Metacognition involves appreciating value of using cognitive strategies, and
strategic application of:
1. Declarative knowledge- knowing what: about yourself as learner, factors
influencing learning and memory, skills/strategies/resources needed to
perform task
2. Procedural knowledge- know how to use the strategies
3. Self-regulatory knowledge- knowing the conditions, when and why to apply
procedures and strategies
Three essential metacognitive skills:
Planning- deciding how much time to give a task, strategies to use, where to
start, resources to gather, what order to follow
Monitoring- real-time awareness of “how I’m doing” “is this making sense” “am I
going to fast” “should I be note-taking”
Evaluating- making judgements about the processes and outcomes of thinking
and learning
(Mnemonic- Penguins Make Ecstasy)
Metacognition most helpful when tasks challenging, but not too hard
 Individual Differences in Metacognition
o Difference in ability to use metacognitive strategies
 Some result of development
o Children grow older, exercise executive control over strategies
o MC strategies start development around 5-7 years
 Knowing and doing are not the same
o Differences caused by biology or learning experiences

Learning Strategies
Good learning strategies help students learn, these strats can be taught
How we first learn influences how we remember info and apply knowledge later
Must be:
1. Cognitively engaged
2. Focus attention on relevant aspects
3. Invest effort, make connections, elaborate, translate, invent, organise, retrieve
into, process deeply
a. More practice and process, better learning
4. Metacognition- regulating and monitoring their own learning
 Being Strategic About Learning
Learning strategies- kind of procedural knowledge, knowing how to do
something
Some general and taught in school, others subject specific, others invented by
individual
Can be: cognitive- summarising, identifying the main idea, metacognitive-
monitoring comprehension or behavioural- timer to work until time’s up
 Ways to accomplish task, intentionally applied when usual methods aren’t
working, and strategic effort is needed

, Skilled learners have many strategies that can be applied nearly automatically,
have higher GPAs
Important principles for students:
1. Exposed to different strategies, both general and specific
2. Taught SR (self-regulatory) knowledge about when, where, why to use various
strategies
3. Desire to employ these skills: several learning strategy programs inc
motivational training
4. Believe they can learn new strategies, effort will pay off, can get smarter
applying these strategies
5. Background knowledge, useful schemas in area being studied

Examples of Learning strategies




o Deciding What’s Important
 Learning starts with focussing attention on what’s important
 Students often focus on seductive details as they are more
interesting
 Finding central idea hard if lack knowledge in the area and the new
info provided is extensive
o Summaries
 Should teach students to summarise
 Ask them to:
 Find topic sentence for each paragraph
 Identify big ideas covering several points
 Find supporting info for big ideas
 Delete redundant info
o Begin with short, easy, organised reading before harder passages
o Underlining and highlighting
 Most frequent but ineffectively used strategies in college students
 Highlight too much
 Ask yourself: why highlight this, why is it important? -stimulates
deeper processing and retrieval practice

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
De reputatie van een verkoper is gebaseerd op het aantal documenten dat iemand tegen betaling verkocht heeft en de beoordelingen die voor die items ontvangen zijn. Er zijn drie niveau’s te onderscheiden: brons, zilver en goud. Hoe beter de reputatie, hoe meer de kwaliteit van zijn of haar werk te vertrouwen is.
lablyth Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam
Bekijk profiel
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
2489
Lid sinds
4 jaar
Aantal volgers
374
Documenten
61
Laatst verkocht
1 maand geleden

4,6

33 beoordelingen

5
23
4
7
3
2
2
1
1
0

Recent door jou bekeken

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Veelgestelde vragen