Meta-cognitive strategies are tools you use to think about your thinking, like having a super-smart helper inside your head that helps you figure out how to learn better.
Imagine you're trying to build a tower with blocks, but you're not sure which block goes next. You pause and ask yourself: “What have I tried before? What works? What doesn’t?” That’s like using meta-cognitive strategies, you’re thinking about your thinking so you can make better choices.
How It Works Like a Super Helper
Think of your brain as a robot that learns new things. Sometimes it needs to check its own work, just like you might check your homework before turning it in. Meta-cognitive strategies are the tools that let your brain do that checking, asking questions like:
- “Am I getting this?”
- “Should I try another way?”
- “What did I learn from my mistake?”
These tools help you become a better learner by letting you control how you think and solve problems, just like a robot with a super-smart helper inside! Meta-cognitive strategies are tools you use to think about your thinking, like having a super-smart helper inside your head that helps you figure out how to learn better.
Imagine you're trying to build a tower with blocks, but you're not sure which block goes next. You pause and ask yourself: “What have I tried before? What works? What doesn’t?” That’s like using meta-cognitive strategies, you’re thinking about your thinking so you can make better choices.
Examples
- A student checks their work after a test to see where they might have gone wrong.
- Someone reads a book and stops to think about what they just learned.
- A child plans how to solve a puzzle before starting.
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See also
- What is comprehension?
- What is People’s thinking?
- What is metacognition?
- What is reflection?
- How Does Language Shape Our Thinking?