Learning To Be A Better Student
Learning To Be A Better Student
Chapter 10
Knowing the "self' is not enough. Since "who you are” is partly made up of your choices, you
must also have the ability to choose especially to be better "you." In the school setting, your
knowledge of yourself should at least enable you to become a better student. This lesson will
present several techniques that you can adapt depending on your situation and preferences in
order to make you a better learner. Learning should not just mean studying for your quizzes
and exams in school. Learning could also occur outside the confines of a book or of a classroom
like when you want to acquire a new move in your favourite sport, the skills for a certain hobby,
among others. Furthermore, the techniques here are not the only techniques available and
months or years from now, new ways on how to study better will be discovered or rediscovered.
What is important at this moment is that you learn how to learn these things.
Specific Objectives
By the end of this course, students will be able to generate, evaluate, and document design
decisions.
DURATION:
● Metacognition is also not limited to the thinking process of the individual. It also
includes keeping one's emotions and motivations while learning in check
(PapaleontiouLouca 2003, p. 9). Some people learn better when they like the subject,
some when they are challenged by the topic, end others if they have a reward system
each time they finish a task. The emotional state and the motivation of a person then
should also be in the preferred ideal state for that person in order to facilitate further
his/her learning
As seen from the above mentioned definitions, metacognition has two aspects:
1) SELF-APPRAISAL - is your personal reflection on your knowledge and capabilities
2) SELF-MANAGEMENT - is the mental processes you employ using what you have in
planning and adapting to successfully learn or accomplish a certain task
(Paris and Winnograd 1990 in Papaleontiou-Louca 2003, p: 10)
ELEMENTS OF METACOGNITION
Similar concepts, usually called elements of metacognition, are Metacognitive Knowledge or
what you know about how you think and Metacognition Regulation or how you adjust your
thinking processes to help you learn better (American Institutes for Research 2010, 2).
Under metacognitive knowledge are several variables that affect how you know or assess
yourself as a thinker.
1. The personal variable that is your evaluation of your strengths and weaknesses in learning.
2. The task variable is what you know or what you think about the nature of the task as w ell
as what strategies the task requires.
3. The strategy variable refers to what strategies or skills you already have in dealing with
certain tasks (American Institutes for Research 2010, 2).
However, it must be noted that in order to make self-appraisal and self-management work,
you must have an accurate self-assessment—you must be honest about what you know and
capable of in order to find ways to utilize your strengths and improve on your weaknesses
(Schoenfield 1987 in PapateontioLouca 2003,p. 10).
Utilizing metacognitive skills, ere are other skills help you with exercising
metacognition:
1. KNOWING YOUR LIMITS (Waterloo Students Success Office n.d., 2): as mentioned
earlier, one cannot really make any significance advancement in using metacognitive skills
without having an honest and accurate evaluation of what you know and what you don't
know. Knowing your limits also looks at the scope and limitations of your resources so that
you can work with what you have at the moment and look for ways to cope with other
necessities.
3. SKIMMING (Waterloo Students Success Ottjce n.d., 2) : this is basically browsing over a
material and keeping an eye on keywords, phrases, or sentences. It is also knowing where to
search for such key terms. For example, you might want to look at the introduction first or
GEC 1- Understanding the Self 20 the abstract. The table of contents can also provide you
with a quick guide to the contents of the book. Introductory paragraphs, headings or
subheadings, and conclusions can also provide you with an overview of the whole material.
This technique works best when you want to get an idea about the contents of a reading
material, when you are trying to read through several materials in a limited time frame, or
when you want to focus on certain details, among others.
4. REHEARSING (Waterloo Students Success Office n.d., 2): this is not just repeatedly
talking, writing. and/or doing what you've learned but also trying to make a personal
interpretation or summary of the learning experience. One of the fun ways to do this is
imagine yourself being interviewed about your task and as you try to convey what you have
learned from the resources, you will also insert your opinions or other personal take on the
matter, Just be sure that the key concepts are well understood and are still in-line with the
source material even with multiple rehearsals.
5. SELF-TEST (Waterloo Students Success Office n.d., 2): as the name implies, this is
trying to test your comprehension of your learning experience or the skills you have acquired
during learning. While some materials already come with tests like this book, you can still
create tests for yourself. You can make essay questions or definition of terms test while you
are reading or watching a material. You can challenge yourself in completing a task
successfully, maybe in a given period of time, for example doing 50 free throws with at least
90% success rate. Self-test does not only focus also on what you have learned but how you
learned it. You should also ask after the experience questions like "What strategies did I use?
"How successful were my learning strategies?" "How can I further improve my learning
skills?"
Other strategies that you need to develop include asking questions as well as questioning
your methods, self-reflection, finding a mentor or support group if necessary, thinking out
loud (though you have to be considerate of others also when doing this), and welcoming
errors as learning experiences. For clarification, “welcoming errors" does not mean seeking
them or consciously making them as much as possible. The phrase means that when you
commit o mistake, you do not dismiss it as insignificant or you do try to avoid responsibility
of the results. You must process them to learn every lesson that you can take about yourself,
about the topic, and other people or things. By having a more positive attitude toward
mistakes, you will also have the courage to venture into new and unknown learning
experiences that may one day interest you.
Using these strategies, you can at least identify four types metacognitive learners (Perkins;
1992 in Cambridge International Examinations 2015, 2).
1. "TACIT" learners are unaware of their metacognitive processes although they know the
extent of their knowledge.
2. “AWARE” learners are aware of some of their metacognitive strategies but using
techniques are not always planned.
3. “STRATEGIC” learners, as the name implies, strategize, and plan their course of action
toward a learning experience.
4. "REFLECTIVE" learners reflect on their thinking while they are strategies and will adapt
their metacognitive skills depending on the situation
As you may have noticed already, the goal of metacognition is for the student to be a
selfregulated learner. Education should not be limited by the capabilities of the teacher, the
content of school textbooks, the four corners of the classroom, and the duration of the
academic year or your courses.
BENEFITS IN USING METACOGNITIVE TECHNIQUES
1. One should have the capability to study things on his/her own as well as accurately
evaluate his/her progress.
2. Another benefit is the compensation and development of cognitive limitations of the
learner because of the student is now aware of his/her capabilities.
Other tips that you can use in studying are the following:
1. Making an outline of the things you want to learn, the things you are reading or doing,
and/or the things you remember;
3. Integrating variation in your schedule and learning experience. Change reading material
every hour and do not put similar topics together (ex. Try studying English then Mathematics
instead of English then Filipino together). Also include physical activities in your planning
4. You may also try to Incubate Your Ideas. First, write your draft without doing much
editing. Let the ideas flow. Then leave your draft at least overnight or around 24 hours—
some do not look at it for a week—and do something else. After a given period, go back to
your draft or prototype and you might find a fresh perspective about it, Sometimes, during
incubation, you suddenly have ideas coming to you. Write them down in a notebook first and
do not integrate them into the draft yet. Review then when the incubation period is done;
5. Revising, summarizing, and taking down notes then rereading them might help you
minimize cramming in the last minute especially when you have a weakness in memorizing
facts and data. Some people are motivated when the deadline is very close—for example,
tomorrow—that they just review the day before some evaluation or exercises. If you are that
kind of person, you may still motivate yourself and have that feeling of urgency at the last
minute but by using the aforementioned techniques, your "cramming" need not be a
desperate attempt to learn but only as a way to energize your brain as you make a final
review of the things you have already been studying for a week or so before;
6. You should also engage what you have learned. Do something about it. On a reading
material for example, highlights keywords and phrases, write your opinions about the matter
on a separate notebook, or create a diagram or concept map. Some people also learn best by
copying the key paragraphs word for word. You may want to look for other definitions and
compare or contrast materials. Use your new knowledge during discussions—just do
something about it.
References/Additional Resources/Readings
American Institute for Research. 2010 “TEAL Center Fact Sheet No. 4 Metacognitive
Processes.” IN teaching Excellence in Adult Literacy. Accessed September 15, 2017.
https:/lincs.ed.gov/sites/default/ files/4_TEAL_Metacognitive.pdf.
Elmore, Kristen George Smith, and Daphna Oyeserman. 2012 “Self-Concept and Identity.” In
Handbook of Self and Identity, 2nd Ed., edited by Mark R. Leary amd Kune Price Tangney,
69-96. New York. The Guilford Press.