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  • Metacognition is the ability or self-awareness to recognize what you know and what you don't

  • know. And that may seem simple but there's a very big difference between understanding

  • a concept as it is explained to you compared to being able to explain that concept to somebody

  • else.

  • When I first started to teach professional students, they would ask me how can I do better

  • on your exam and I would say, study. And they would say, I'm studying day and night and

  • I would say, study harder. Or they would say, I went into the test and I knew the material

  • but as soon as I sat down in the room, the material vaporized. Well, it didn't vaporize

  • but I wasn't very good at articulating a strategy that was helpful for them. But I've come to

  • understand the gap between what students consider to be knowing the material and what I really

  • mean when I say study harder. Students learn the material as it appears on the page, in

  • the order that it appears without really any context. What they should try to do is pull

  • that material off the page and look at from all angles. Meaning, for instance, Rhodococcus

  • pneumonia, thinking back to immunology, how does immunology impact Rhodococcus and how

  • does the fact that it's an intracellular organism change your drug choice. And then they need

  • to think about what they have learned within that week, how is Rhodococcus pneumonia

  • different from other forms of pneumonia? Or how is it similar? And then they need to think

  • forward. Of the information that's on this page, what will be helpful to me when I'm

  • trying to diagnose this disease. Or making a treatment decision. Or advising a client

  • for how to prevent the disease in the future. So metacognition is really critical for success

  • in the third and fourth year, that's the tipping point. Because in the first year, there isn't

  • that much material to reach back for and clinics is really a long ways off. And in the second

  • year, there's a little bit more but in the third year, you need to reach back to those

  • first two years and you need to think about how you would use it in the future. And when

  • you put the material in that context, it's a lot easier to remember for an exam and in

  • the future.

  • In the last five minutes of every lecture, I pose a question to the students, asking

  • them to apply the material that they learned today in a clinical way. They respond in an

  • essay format through K-State Online. I then review every student response and compile

  • the results to present to the class during the first five minutes of lecture the next day.

  • I share a number of categories of responses. The best response or the correct answer. There's

  • a category that I call "also good," which means those are not the answers I had in mind

  • when I answered the question but they are correct answers and they are actually very

  • creative answers. The next category, misconceptions, are incorrect answers and this gives me an

  • opportunity to help clarify that material for the students and to reflect on the lecture

  • the day before and think about why that material may not have been clear for the students.

  • And the last category I call "answer the question that was asked," and this case students provided

  • a diagnosis rather than a clinical sign and this gives me a chance to emphasize to the

  • students how important it is to listen carefully to the question and always answer the question

  • that is asked. From clinicians, from colleagues and from clients.

  • This particular exercise in metacognition helps the students see how the material might

  • be used in the clinical setting and helps me to understand the material that was not

  • well understood by the students the day before. It gives me a chance to review that material.

  • At the end the semester, we polled the students about the exercise and the responses were

  • surprisingly detailed about how this exercise impacted their learning. I like this first

  • response, "I would even discuss the question with classmates later in the day, which I

  • doubt I would have done with the material had we not had the exercise." The second student

  • said the exercise is "more firmly situated in my long-term memory." This third said I

  • pay more attention during lecture wondering what Dr. Rush would ask. And this last one

  • is almost the definition of metacognition, it "often showed me that even though I think

  • I got it, apparently I was still missing something and had to go back and figure out what I missed."

  • So now instead of telling students to study harder, I now can tell them to study smarter

  • and I can actually give them some strategies that will help them make better use of their

  • study time, to perform better on exams and hopefully to remember the information in the

  • future.

Metacognition is the ability or self-awareness to recognize what you know and what you don't

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教學重點:元認知 (A Focus on Teaching: Metacognition)

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    Christine Tsuang posted on 2021/01/14
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