{"id":12779,"date":"2020-05-29T01:00:16","date_gmt":"2020-05-29T05:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/?post_type=cw_post&p=12779"},"modified":"2020-06-03T07:43:22","modified_gmt":"2020-06-03T11:43:22","slug":"critical-importance-of-metacognition","status":"publish","type":"cw_post","link":"https:\/\/aurora-institute.org\/cw_post\/critical-importance-of-metacognition\/","title":{"rendered":"Recognizing the Critical Importance of Metacognition"},"content":{"rendered":"
This is the second in a series of blog posts about New Hampshire\u2019s work study practices\u2014essential competencies such as communication, collaboration, and self-direction. Links to the others posts are below. This article explores the foundational role of metacognition in developing and deepening work study practices.<\/em><\/p>\n Metacognition: The Common Thread<\/u><\/strong><\/p>\n When we first began learning about the work study practices (WSPs) and supporting teachers in developing them within the classroom, our initial lens was focused on assessment (in hindsight, really on reporting). We believe this was the wrong lens to initially be looking at these competencies through. As our understanding and experience with teachers and in classrooms has evolved, we\u2019ve come to believe very strongly that metacognition is the critical lever in this work. A student\u2019s understanding of where they are within their learning, as well as how to move forward armed with the skills, understanding, and feedback to monitor and adapt is crucial for success in any pathway, college, or career. This is also captured in the 7th<\/sup> element of the new definition<\/a> of competency-based learning: \u201cRigorous, common expectations for learning (knowledge, skills, and dispositions) are explicit, transparent, measurable, and transferable)\u201d (Levine and Patrick, 2019).<\/p>\n Students must know where they are and where they\u2019re trying to get to be successful in learning, and this is precisely what metacognitive practices capture. The Essential Skills and Dispositions Frameworks<\/em><\/a> (Lench et al, 2015) provide direction for utilizing the components of metacognition as the guardrails for developing these deeper competencies. For example, in the visual below, the top and bottom components (Self-Awareness and Monitoring & Adapting) \u201csandwich\u201d the other three components of self-direction.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Teachers have been incredibly creative in how this is done, but ultimately, as they provide opportunities for students to reflect and develop an awareness of where they are in a skill (like being a self-directed learner), students can begin to think specifically about where they want to be, and importantly, how to get there. Opportunities for students to monitor and adapt are critical and very often have to be explicitly incorporated into the structures of learning. Scaffolding is critical, especially at the beginning. Over time, students take on more and more of this responsibility, truly becoming more agentic in all aspects. This, however, does take time.<\/p>\n Terry Bolduc, 3rd grade teacher in Timberlane School District, outlined her approach to developing and deepening metacognitive practices with her students and the impact this has on them as learners and as humans:<\/p>\n \u201cWhen I introduce my students to work study practices, it involves a lot of talking and taking advantage of any opportunity to bring events and situations back to the importance of work study practices. Once I can show them examples of work study practices in action, only then can they begin the important work of actually thinking about them. I have had students tell me that they set work study practice goals, in the beginning, because I asked them to. Not always understanding the importance of them early on. But, as time passes, and they truly begin to think about them on their own, it\u2019s that metacognition\u2014the thinking about their thinking\u2014where I am able to hook them.<\/em><\/p>\n \u00a0<\/em>\u201cChildren are able to verbalize that they find themselves thinking about how they can be more self-directed. Instead of sitting on the couch waiting for Mom to come down stairs and tell them to start getting ready for school, they take it upon themselves to start getting ready. Instead of coming in from recess and wandering around the room, they realize they know what\u2019s coming next, and they can prepare themselves. They can actually be a self-starter. That\u2019s the true power of teaching children about work study practices\u2014when they actually put them into practice on their own and realize it makes things easier for them.\u201d<\/em><\/p>\n In summary, once students understand \u201cthe why\u201d themselves, they begin to apply these skills in their own lives.<\/p>\n Assessing For Learning: Developing Agency Through Co-designed Learning Experiences<\/u><\/strong><\/p>\n There are those in the assessment world who don\u2019t believe that these deeper learning competencies can be assessed reliably. Dr. David Conley however, proffered a big bet that he could create a framework that could capture this learning developmentally, if not in a progression. This resulted in the creation of the EPIC (and later, C!E) Essential Skills and Dispositions Frameworks<\/em>, constructed by a team led by Sarah Lench, now of C!E.<\/p>\n In New Hampshire, we firmly believe that we can reliably assess these critical competencies in ways that are FOR learning rather than merely an end-point determination. This led to another big bet, this time by the New Hampshire Learning Initiative (NHLI) and the New Hampshire Department of Education (NHDOE), that New Hampshire educators and students can reliably demonstrate these success skills as embedded in the common performance assessments of New Hampshire\u2019s Performance Assessment of Competency Education (PACE) system. Forming a research-practice partnership with Jobs for the Future (JFF), headquartered in Boston and funded by the Hewlett Foundation, NHLI is working closely with social studies and other secondary educators in New Hampshire to develop a system to prove out this second wager.<\/p>\n Our emphasis on the WSPs over the past four years as a grantee<\/a> of the Assessment for Learning Project<\/a> (supported through the Gates Foundation and the Hewlett Foundation) has allowed teachers across K-12 to dig into how these practices are included in instruction and assessed for learning. That is, that students are engaged in a co-designed process to build a body of evidence of growth and learning related to these competencies. An example of this is how students were able to design what their learning artifacts would be when they were developing resources for other students in their school related to CARES (the Responsive Classroom\u2019s framework of Cooperation, Assertion, Responsibility, Empathy, and Self-Direction). These were kindergarten and first graders, but with scaffolding they were successfully able to determine for themselves how to share their learning in a meaningful way.<\/p>\n