Teaching For Metacognition
Published 11/2023
MP4 | Video: h264, 1920x1080 | Audio: AAC, 44.1 KHz
Language: English | Size: 1.17 GB | Duration: 2h 5m
This course investigates strategies that develop student agency, independence, responsibility, and engagement.
What you'll learnLearn metacognitive teaching strategies that enable students to take a greater role in their learning.
Understand how metacognition enhances intrinsic motivation, self-efficacy, and ultimately, achievement.
Improve your command of questions and prompts to enhance student thinking.
Appreciate the autotelic fully alive condition of Flow that emanates from metacognitive learning..
RequirementsThis course has no barriers. Designed for all teachers, and parents too!
DescriptionMetacognitive-supportive teaching has the greatest effect on learning. Metacognition is about active learning. Metacognitive teaching strategies enable students to take a greater role in their learning, enhancing intrinsic motivation, self-efficacy, and ultimately, achievement. The best learners are metacognitive, and ALL students can improve their metacognitive approach to learning, but how do teachers foster this? Effective teachers foster a metacognitive learning approach, to generate better quality thinking. They want students to feel in control of their learning, to develop the skills and abilities to direct and guide themselves. This is autonomy. Teachers nurture self-efficacy and learning confidence, the core motivator driving human action. The best learners are metacognitive in their approach to learning. This is the outstanding factor that differentiates learners. Teachers who encourage metacognition catalyse in their students intrinsic motivation, curiosity, independence of thought, and desire for challenge.Mostly, the thinking process is concealed because people have little understanding of how they think. Thinking includes reflection and conscious awareness about what you know, what you do not know, what you should know, and what you want to know. Thinking is an internal conversation weighing up different viewpoints. Learning is a consequence of thinking and generates knowledge. What we do with that knowledge determines wisdom.
OverviewSection 1: Thinking
Lecture 1 Thinking
Section 2: Curiosity
Lecture 2 Curiosity
Section 3: Questions
Lecture 3 Questions
Section 4: Prompts
Lecture 4 Prompts
Section 5: Verbalisation
Lecture 5 Verbalisation
Section 6: Peer Teaching
Lecture 6 Peer Teaching
Section 7: Reflection
Lecture 7 Reflection
Section 8: Writing
Lecture 8 Writing
Section 9: Competition and Flow
Lecture 9 Competition and Flow
Primary and secondary teachers of all subjects and experience levels, and parents.
Screenshots
Download linkrapidgator.net:
https://rapidgator.net/file/4c31401c383fb846ecb2bb06e438cf03/cdddm.Teaching.For.Metacognition.part1.rar.html
https://rapidgator.net/file/2575104a42886ffa05b71965c12a7aa7/cdddm.Teaching.For.Metacognition.part2.rar.html
uploadgig.com:
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/1e6e18d018650A2A/cdddm.Teaching.For.Metacognition.part1.rar
https://uploadgig.com/file/download/81dffD41dD9a6A51/cdddm.Teaching.For.Metacognition.part2.rar
nitroflare.com:
https://nitroflare.com/view/7AD8083FC4110F4/cdddm.Teaching.For.Metacognition.part1.rar
https://nitroflare.com/view/EA757467B955524/cdddm.Teaching.For.Metacognition.part2.rar