Metacognition: Student Reflections on Problem Solving

Authors

  • Shelly Wismath University of Lethbridge Author
  • Doug Orr University of Lethbridge Author
  • Brandon Good University of Lethbridge Author

Abstract

Twenty-first century teaching and learning focus on the fundamental skills of critical thinking and problem solving, creativity and innovation, and collaboration and communication. Metacognition is a crucial aspect of both problem solving and critical thinking, but it is often difficult to get students to engage in authentic metacognitive reflection. The authors describe a course built explicitly around the objective of developing students' problem-solving, critical-thinking, and metacognitive skills. They argue that the metacognitive reflection demonstrated by students in this course is valid evidence of their learning of essential problem-solving and critical-thinking skills.

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Published

2024-04-30

How to Cite

Metacognition: Student Reflections on Problem Solving. (2024). Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 25(2). https://celt.miamioh.edu/index.php/JECT/article/view/471