🧠 Thinking About Thinking: Building Metacognitive Learners
How to help students become aware of their own minds
Metacognition means “thinking about your thinking.” It’s not just about solving a problem but understanding how you approached it, and whether that strategy worked—or didn’t.
Teaching students to think metacognitively helps them become more resilient, intentional, and independent learners.
🧩 Metacognitive Strategies to Teach
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Plan: “What’s the goal? What strategy will I use?”
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Monitor: “Am I staying on track? Do I understand this?”
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Evaluate: “Did my strategy work? What should I change next time?”
🧪 How to Teach It
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Model your own thinking aloud (“Hmm, I’m not sure—maybe I’ll try this method first...”)
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Use reflection prompts regularly
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Teach question stems like:
→ “What am I trying to learn?”
→ “Why did I get this wrong?”
→ “What will I do differently next time?”
📌 Tip
Start small: Ask students to pause and reflect at key points during a task—not just after. Reflection isn’t an add-on; it’s part of the learning process.

