32
Metacognition Skills Metacognition Skills in the in the Kindergarten Kindergarten Curriculum Curriculum Bobbie Bien Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher Classroom Teacher

Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Metacognition Skills Metacognition Skills in the in the

Kindergarten Curriculum Kindergarten Curriculum

Bobbie BienBobbie BienClassroom TeacherClassroom Teacher

Page 2: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Longfellow Elementary SchoolLongfellow Elementary SchoolPrincipal, Cathy NowackPrincipal, Cathy Nowack

Assistant Principal, Molly KettererAssistant Principal, Molly Ketterer

Kindergarten TeamKindergarten TeamMichele DorseyMichele Dorsey

Debi HochkeppelDebi HochkeppelKate NicolKate Nicol

Bobbie BienBobbie BienPriscilla AndachterPriscilla AndachterBertha RobinsonBertha RobinsonDebbie LegowskiDebbie Legowski

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 3: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Longfellow Elementary School Staff Development Presentation

November 3, 2008

• Identify Metcognition skills

• Discover ways you can use them in your classroom

Page 4: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Talk with a person near you about what metacognition means.

How can we apply this concept to all students?

Page 5: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

“If learning is making sense of experience, and thinking is how we learn, then improving children’s thinking will help them make more sense of learning and of life.”

Robert Fisher, Teaching Thinking and Creativity

Comparison Labeling Looking Carefully Role Taking Precise &Accurate Sequencing

Comparison Labeling Looking Carefully Role taking Precise & Accurate Sequencing

Page 6: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

MetacognitionThinking About Thinking

KNOWING HOW TO LEARN, and knowing which strategies work best, are valuable skills that differentiate expert learners from novice learners.

Metacognition, or awareness of the process of learning, is a critical ingredient to successful learning.

Metacognition is an important concept in cognitive theory. It consists of two basic processes occurring simultaneously: monitoring your progress as you learn, and making changes and adapting your strategies if you perceive you are not doing so well. (Winn, W. & Snyder, D., 1998) It's about self-reflection, self-responsibility and initiative, as well as goal setting and time management.

"Metacognitive skills include taking conscious control of learning, planning and selecting strategies, monitoring the progress of learning, correcting errors, analyzing the effectiveness of learning strategies, and changing learning behaviors and strategies when necessary." (Ridley, D.S., Schutz, P.A., Glanz, R.S. & Weinstein, C.E., 1992)

Page 7: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

MetacognitionThinking About Thinking

What is metacognition?Metacognition is a learned way of thinking and applying this process systematically and effectively to the learning of particular bodies of knowledge.

Why is it beneficial for young children?In order to learn more effectively, children need to acquire thinking strategies that enhance or modify their cognitive abilities. Adult-child interactions, in which the adult mediates a child’s new learning experiences, help students gain more from the content and develop automatic responding in a broad base of thinking processes.

Page 8: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

MetacognitionThinking About Thinking

What is the Metacognition Focus?A metacognition focus is the systematic approach that explicitly teaches cognitive strategies. The ongoing focus addresses specific thinking processes that are taught, learned, and applied across the curriculum. Teachers plan lessons that intentionally include meaningful daily experiences and adult-child interactions to promote the use of metacognition strategies. Adult-child interactions involve:• The child learning behavior regulation through teacher modeling, direct instruction, and role-taking for the purpose of optimal learning.•Purposeful planning of mediated learning experiences•The child experiencing a natural synthesis of mind and body as explorer and creator of knowledge via active participation in the learning process.•The mediational teaching style with direct instruction in the content•The teacher guiding the child to learning goals through process-oriented questioning in a mediated learning experience•The teacher giving feedback to steer, extend, and commend the learner’s use of appropriate, and therefore, helpful learned thought processes.

Page 9: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

MetacognitionThinking About Thinking

What happens in a metacognition classroom?

The metacognition classroom is one in which the mediational teaching style and the mediated learning experiences are key to improved learning across the curriculum.

The mediational teaching style is characterized by:• The teacher asking many process questions o help children focus on their thinking and explain their thought processes.•The teacher facilitating the interaction between the child and the learning experience.•The teacher continually seeking opportunities to maximize the children’s learning through generalizing the thinking strategies or cognitive functions•The teacher demonstrating how to generalize the cognitive strategies beyond what the children are working on at the moment•The class bridging learned cognitive functions between home, school and the community•The teacher managing the mediated learning experience

Page 10: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Metacognitionin Kindergarten

Goal: The student will demonstrate understanding and use knowledge, skills, strategies, and behaviors for high-level thinking

and problem solving.

Page 11: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

What are cognitive functions?

Cognitive functions are combinations of native ability, habits, attitude toward learning, motives and strategies. Cognitive functions are the thinking processes used to deepen and extend students’ understanding of the content areas and are used to direct their thinking and performance. Students apply the cognitive processing across the curriculum and in other authentic learning situations.

Page 12: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

The learned thought processes for thinking about thinking include:

Self-regulation Looking carefully

Comparison Precision and accuracy

Role taking Sequencing

Labeling

Page 13: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Self-Regulation

The control of behaviors of mind and body for improving the effectiveness of thinking, learning, problem solving and social processes. This self-control helps students to focus, plan, manage, organize, direct, order, and sequence their behavior. A student’s behavior is initially controlled by external stimuli. The goal is to guide the students in the development of regulating behavior independent of adults and in using internal stimuli.

Page 14: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Self-Regulation

Objective – The student will be able to self-regulate by:

A. Identifying and adhering to the boundaries of one’s body for gross and fine motor activities.

B. Recognizing expected behaviors and deliberately planning, managing, and directing one’s physical and mental actions accordingly.

C. Using rules to manage mental and physical behavior

Page 15: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Looking Carefully

Planning and organizing the visual search by attending to defining characteristics , gathering clear and complete

information, and being precise and accurate. The goal is to enable the children to deliberately attend to

detail in all facets of their world.

Page 16: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Look Carefully

The student will be able to look carefully by:• Using systematic searches to define details.• Collecting clear and concise information to delineate

distinguishing characteristics.• Applying precise and accurate information for thinking

and articulating.• Using selective attention to relevant clues for

identifying unique traits.

Page 17: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Comparison

The scrutinizing of two or more objects, events, or persons to define similarities and/or differences. The goal is to enable children, to label, and to describe the characteristics or attributes of each item and determine the relationship of items being compared.

Page 18: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Comparison

Objective: The student will be able to compare by:

A. Using systematic searches to inspect two or more objects, creatures, or events for similarities and differences.

B. Collecting clear, concise, and accurate information about what is being compared.

C. Labeling and describing features which distinguish similarities and differences.

D. Describing similarities and differences on multiple dimensions.

Page 19: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Precision and Accuracy

The ability to communicate with exact, clear cut, correct information. The goal is to enable children to use self-regulation, looking carefully, comparing, labeling, and gathering clear and complete information to relate findings with precise and accurate language.

Page 20: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Precision and Accuracy

The student will be able to apply precision and accuracy by:

• Demonstrating control of physical movement and articulation of thoughts.

• Using systematic searches to acquire precise and accurate information.

• Labeling and describing particular characteristics and defining criteria about items, sequences and events, and processes.

• Gathering information, applying defining criteria to it, and articulating findings about it.

Page 21: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Role Taking

The ability to view things from various physical, psychological, and social dimensions. The goal is for children to:

• Physically see objects differently according to proximity or position in relationship to the object.

• Psychologically perceive the attitudes and beliefs of others based on feelings and prior experiences.

• Socially learn to understand the points of view of others and imagine themselves in the roles of others.

Page 22: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Role Taking

The student will be able to apply role taking by:• Seeing objects differently according to

proximity or position in relationship to the

object.• Perceiving the attitudes and beliefs of other

based on feelings and prior experiences.• Imagining one’s self from the point of

view and in the roles of others.

Page 23: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Sequencing

Making sense of the order, structure, and predictability of the world through discovering the patterns and regularities in visual, auditory, and tactual arrangements. The goal is for students to use memory, rules, and precision o detect, create, extend, and verify patterns and regularities.

Page 24: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Sequencing

The student will be able to sequence by:• Developing and applying the understanding that a

sequence of events can be repeated in a pattern.

• Recognizing sequences and patterns in a line or in time.

• Identifying and validating sequences and patterns.

• Explaining the rule that regularity and repetition occur in a line or in time.

Page 25: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Labeling

The deliberate naming with precision and accuracy of processes, procedures, and tasks in addition to people, professions, services, objects, locations, and events for building vocabulary and activating links for understanding. The goal is to increase children’s vocabulary knowledge and provide a frame of reference for awakening prior knowledge and for connecting new learning by:

• naming the thinking processes to be applied

• labeling the actions to take when following directions (where, when, how)

• Using names for tasks or activities such as draw, write, read, graph.

Page 26: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Labeling

The student will be able to label by:

• Using vocabulary for thinking processes and actions taken to complete assignments and activities.

• Applying vocabulary for describing people, professions, services, objects, locations, and events.

• Recognizing and using positional terms (under, over, top, bottom, behind, next to, inside, outside) for comprehending and describing spatial relationships between and among people and objects.

Page 27: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

QuestionsDo you have any

red hot

scorching

searing

sizzling

smoldering

questions about Metacognition in the Kindergarten Curriculum that you would

like to ask?

Page 28: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Now, let’s talk about how you can integrate

metacognition in your classroom.

Now, let’s talk about how you can integrate

metacognition in your classroom.

Page 29: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Notes from Staff Development Presentation

November 3, 2008

Page 30: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

Thank you for coming to hear about Metacognition in the

Kindergarten Classroom

Thank you for coming to hear about Metacognition in the

Kindergarten Classroom

Page 31: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

NotesNotes

Page 32: Metacognition Skills in the Kindergarten Curriculum Bobbie Bien Classroom Teacher

MetacognitionThinking About Thinking

Theories of Jean PiagetLev Vygotsky

Reuven FeuresteinH. Carl Haywood