Learning Strategies: Do Students Know Enough Smart Learning Strategies?
Learning Strategies: March 22, 2012 | 11:16 AM | By Annie Murphy Paul;Â LEARNING SMARTER;
Lenny Gonzales
Whatâs the key to effective learning? One intriguing body of research suggests a rather gnomic answer: Itâs not just what you know. Itâs what you know about what you know.
To put it in more straightforward terms, anytime a student learns, he or she has to bring in two kinds of prior knowledge: knowledge about the subject at hand (say, mathematics or history) and knowledge about how learning works. Parents and educators are pretty good at imparting the first kind of knowledge. Weâre comfortable talking about concrete information: names, dates, numbers, facts. But the guidance we offer on the act of learning itselfâthe âmetacognitiveâ aspects of learningâis more hit-or-miss, and it shows.
Research has found that students vary widely in what they know about how to learn, according to a team of educational researchers from Australia writing in this monthâs issue of the journal Instructional Science. Most striking, low-achieving students show âsubstantial deficitsâ in their awareness of the cognitive and metacognitive strategies that lead to effective learningâsuggesting that these studentsâ struggles may be due in part to a gap in their knowledge about how learning works.
Teaching students good learning strategies would ensure that they know how to acquire new knowledge, which leads to improved learning outcomes, writes lead author Helen Askell-Williams of Flinders University in Adelaide, Australia. And studies bear this out. Askell-Williams cites as one example a recent finding by PISA, the Programme for International Student Assessment, which administers academic proficiency tests to students around the globe, and place American students in the mediocre middle. âStudents who use appropriate strategies to understand and remember what they read, such as underlining important parts of the texts or discussing what they read with other people, perform at least 73 points higher in the PISA assessmentâthat is, one full proficiency level or nearly two full school yearsâthan students who use these strategies the least,â the PISA report reads.
In their own study, Askell-Williams and her coauthors took as their subjects 1,388 Australian high school students. They first administered an assessment to find out how much the students knew about cognitive and metacognitive learning strategiesâand found that their familiarity with these tactics was âless than optimal.â
Students can assess their own awareness by asking themselves which of the following learning strategies they regularly use (the response to each item is ideally âyesâ):
- I draw pictures or diagrams to help me understand this subject.
- I make up questions that I try to answer about this subject.
- When I am learning something new in this subject, I think back to what I already know about it.
- I discuss what I am doing in this subject with others.
- I practice things over and over until I know them well in this subject,
- I think about my thinking, to check if I understand the ideas in this subject.
- When I donât understand something in this subject I go back over it again.
- I make a note of things that I donât understand very well in this subject, so that I can follow them up.
- When I have finished an activity in this subject I look back to see how well I did.
- I organize my time to manage my learning in this subject.
- I make plans for how to do the activities in this subject.
Askell-Williams and her colleagues found that those students who used fewer of these strategies reported more difficulty coping with their schoolwork. For the second part of their study, they designed a series of proactive questions for teachers to drop into the lesson on a âjust-in-timeâ basisâat the moments when students could use the prompting most.
These questions, too, can be adopted by any parent or educator to make sure that children know not just what is to be learned, but how.
- What is the topic for todayâs lesson?
- What will be important ideas in todayâs lesson?
- What do you already know about this topic?
- What can you relate this to?
- What will you do to remember the key ideas?
- Is there anything about this topic you donât understand, or are not clear about?
http://mindshift.kqed.org/2012/03/do-students-know-enough-smart-learning-strategies/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&goback=%2Egde_114285_member_103596679
==================================================================Â
To Discuss how these Solutions will add value for you, your organization and/or your clients, Affinity/Resale Opportunities, and/or Collaborative Efforts, Please Contact:
Tom McDonald, tsm@centurytel.net; 608-788-5144; Skype: tsmw5752