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Metacognition and Self-Regulated Learning
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<div style="background-color: #4B0082; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> {{BloomIntro}} Metacognition is "Thinking about your own thinking"βthe ability to step outside your brain and "Observe" how you are learning, solving problems, and making decisions. It is the "Executive Director" of the mind. While "Learning" is about knowing a fact, "Metacognition" is about knowing "If you know" that fact. Combined with "Self-Regulated Learning" (SRL), it is the process of setting "Goals," picking the right "Strategies," and "Monitoring" your progress to stay on track. From the student who realizes they are "Distracted" and puts their phone away, to the expert who "Double-checks" their logic, metacognition is the "Master Skill" that separates "Amateurs" from "Masters." It is the science of "Becoming your own teacher." </div> __TOC__ <div style="background-color: #000080; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> == <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Remembering</span> == * '''Metacognition''' β Awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes. * '''Self-Regulated Learning (SRL)''' β The process by which students take "Control" of their own learning by setting goals and monitoring their behavior. * '''Metacognitive Knowledge''' β What you know about how "Humans in general" think and learn. * '''Metacognitive Regulation''' β The "Actions" you take to control your thinking (Planning, Monitoring, Evaluating). * '''Calibration''' β The "Accuracy" of your self-judgment (e.g., if you think you got 90% right, but you actually got 50%, you have "Poor Calibration"). * '''Reflection''' β The act of "Looking back" at a task to see "What went well" and "What didn't." * '''The Planning Phase''' β Setting a goal and choosing a "Strategy" (e.g., "I will use flashcards for 20 minutes"). * '''The Monitoring Phase''' β Checking your progress "In the moment" (e.g., "Am I actually remembering these words?"). * '''The Evaluation Phase''' β Judging the "Final Result" and "Updating" your strategy for next time. * '''Mental Models''' β The internal "Maps" we use to understand how a complex system works. </div> <div style="background-color: #006400; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> == <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Understanding</span> == Metacognition is understood through '''Self-Awareness''' and '''Adjustment'''. '''1. The "Observer" in the Brain''': Metacognition is like having a "Tiny Version of You" sitting on your shoulder. * While "You" are reading a book, the "Observer" is asking: "Are we just looking at words, or are we actually understanding?" * If the Observer says "We are confused," you "Stop" and "Re-read." * Without metacognition, you would just "Finish the book" and realize at the end that you "Remember nothing." '''2. Calibration (The Accuracy of Ego)''': Most people are "Bad" at knowing what they know. * This is called the "Dunning-Kruger Effect"βpeople who know very little often "Think" they are experts. * Metacognitive training is about "Closing the gap" between your "Confidence" and your "Competence." * It's about being "Humble enough" to test yourself and "Smart enough" to believe the result. '''3. The Cycle of Self-Regulation''': SRL is a "Loop." * **Plan**: "I'm going to learn the 'Carbon Cycle' by drawing it from memory." * **Act**: You start drawing. * **Monitor**: "I can't remember what happens after the Ocean part." * **Adjust**: "I need to go back and read the 'Dissolution' article again." * **Evaluate**: "Drawing it helped me find my 'Weak spot.' I'll do this again for the 'Atmosphere' article." '''The 'Flavell' Definition (1979)'''': John Flavell, the "Father of Metacognition," defined it as "Thinking about thinking." He argued that kids aren't "Stupid," they just don't have "Metacognitive Strategies" yetβthey don't know "How" to make themselves learn. </div> <div style="background-color: #8B0000; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> == <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Applying</span> == '''Modeling 'The Metacognitive Loop' (Simulating a student's self-correction):''' <syntaxhighlight lang="python"> def simulate_self_regulated_learning(goal_difficulty, focus_level): """ Shows how 'Monitoring' saves a study session. """ progress = 0 for hour in range(1, 4): # The 'Observer' checks in if focus_level < 50: print(f"Hour {hour}: Observer says 'You are Distracted!' -> Strategy adjusted (Phone in other room).") focus_level += 30 # Focus improves after adjustment progress += focus_level / goal_difficulty print(f"Hour {hour}: Progress is at {round(progress * 100)}%") return "SESSION COMPLETE" # Case: Distracted student who uses Metacognition to fix it print(simulate_self_regulated_learning(100, 20)) </syntaxhighlight> ; Metacognitive Landmarks : '''The 'Feeling of Knowing' (FOK)''' β The specific "Sensation" in your brain when you "Know" the answer is there, even if you can't say it yet (The "Tip of the Tongue" state). : '''The 'Kruger-Dunning' Study (1999)''' β The proof that "Low-ability people" lack the "Metacognitive skill" to realize they are performing poorly. : '''Metacognitive Prompting''' β A teaching trick where a teacher "Stops" the class every 10 minutes to ask: "What was the most confusing thing in the last 10 minutes?", forcing the students to use their "Observer." : '''Self-Explanation''' β The "Gold Standard" of metacognition: "Talking to yourself" out loud as you solve a problem ("First I do this because..., then I do that because..."). </div> <div style="background-color: #8B4500; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> == <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Analyzing</span> == {| class="wikitable" |+ Cognition vs. Metacognition ! Feature !! Cognition (The Worker) !! Metacognition (The Manager) |- | Task || "Solving the Math problem" || "Checking IF the math makes sense" |- | Level || First-order (Thinking about things) || Second-order (Thinking about thoughts) |- | Goal || Finding the "Answer" || Improving the "Process" |- | Question || "What is 2+2?" || "How do I know I'm right about 2+2?" |} '''The Concept of "Epistemic Volition"''': Analyzing the "Will to Know." Metacognition is not just "Skill"βit is a "Habit." Expert learners have the "Will" to stop themselves when they are confused. They don't "Fake it." They have the "Intellectual Honesty" to admit when their "Mental Model" is broken and the "SRL Skill" to fix it. </div> <div style="background-color: #483D8B; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> == <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Evaluating</span> == Evaluating metacognition: # '''The "Over-Thinking" Trap''': Can you have "Too much" metacognition? (Does "Watching yourself" too closely lead to "Paralysis" or "Anxiety"?). # '''Can it be Taught?''': Is metacognition a "Natural Talent," or can we "Program" it into every child? # '''AI Metacognition''': Does a Large Language Model (like GPT-4) have "Metacognition"? (It can "Reflect" on its own answer, but is it "Self-aware"?). # '''Culture''': Do some cultures value "Certainty" over "Self-Correction," making metacognition "Harder" to practice? </div> <div style="background-color: #2F4F4F; color: #FFFFFF; padding: 20px; border-radius: 8px; margin-bottom: 15px;"> == <span style="color: #FFFFFF;">Creating</span> == Future Frontiers: # '''Metacognitive "Augmentation"''': A wearable device that "Monitors your eye-movements" while you read and "Vibrates" when you "Skim" without understanding. # '''The 'Glass' Brain''': Real-time MRI that shows you "Which part of your brain" is working while you learn, giving you "Physical Feedback" for your metacognition. # '''AI Metacognitive Partners''': An AI that "Sits in on your meetings" and tells you: "You are being too confident about this plan; you missed 3 risks." # '''Collective Metacognition''': Designing "Groups and Teams" that can "Think about their collective thinking," preventing "Groupthink" and "Collective Delusion." [[Category:Psychology]] [[Category:Education]] [[Category:Philosophy]] [[Category:Science of Learning]] </div>
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