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Research in recent years has shown that learning improves significantly if students are able to think about their thinking,or, in other words, learn about their learning. Teaching methods that inspire this kind activity and take the time to engage in exercises in whichstudents do reflect upon the learning process results in consistently higher performance.
Examples:
Ask students orally or in writing what ideas they are bringing to the lesson or the problem they are asked to solve. In other words,get them to think about the lesson, rather than march through it.
Write the students' responses on the board so they can all see them.
Ask students to draw circles or maps that help them put ideas together. A circle with one idea that intersects with another circle -is one way - the Venn diagram. Mind mapping is another helpful tool.
Ask students to explore what they have discovered and to link it to other ideas or issues they have been studying.
Refer to the old ideas for comparison to determine value and weight.
Ask students to talk about their new ideas or to explain why an idea of theirs has changed.
When students complete a project or activity, ask them to reflect upon the process of doing it - either in writing or orally.
Here are a two ideas to help students develop their "muscle" for "thinking about thinking":
Idea One
After you do a Cooperative Learning activity with your students or some type of group work, you might ask the students to answer thefollowing questions:
What did you notice about your role or participation during that lesson/activity?
What did you notice about other people's roles/participation?
How can you use this information to help your learning?
Idea Two
Observation/Consciousness Journals
What you notice goes in an "Observation Journal."
(An Observation Journal can be made by simply folding a full-size sheet of paper in half.)
What you notice about what you notice goes in a "Consciousness Journal."
(This, too, can be created by folding a different sheet of paper in half.)
Steps:
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