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Writer's pictureGlobal Metacognition

Monthly CPD Webinar: Metacognition & Self-Regulated Learning Teacher Training Video

This month's CPD video focuses on increasing metacognitive engagement and is based around a talk given by Neil J Anderson at BYU–Hawaii. Each month we link to a carefully selected lecture, presentation or documentary in order to help educators develop professionally; accompanying each video is a selection of metacognitive questions designed to help you get more from the video.

Using metacognitive reflection questions before and after the videos you show your students is a straightforward way to foster metacognitive reflection. By engaging with the metacognitive questions below you can see for yourself how useful they are in helping to increase learning power!


For each question take a moment to think about the answer. When using this exercise in lessons it is best to use some form of ‘think, pair, share’ approach so that students share their reflections with the group – thus helping to ensure engagement.


 

Pre-Video Metacognitive Questions…

1. What is your most significant obstacle when it comes to learning from videos?

2. When you're watching educational videos what can help you to get the most from them?

3. How might your current mindset impact the usefulness of educational videos for learning?

 

This Month's CPD Video

 

Post-Video Metacognitive Questions

1. How did your mindset impact the amount you learnt from the video?

2. What were the most significant concepts discussed in this talk?

3. How would you evaluate and then improve your approach to learning from videos?


 

Further Reflection Questions

  1. What metacognitive strategies did you learn about in that seminar?

  2. Which metacognitive strategies from the video will you try our in your teaching practice?

  3. Which of the metacognitive strategies you heard about are the most and least promising?

 

How to Use Metacognitive Questions With Videos in Your Lessons


Using metacognitive question prompts at the start, middle and end of a video or documentary you show students in lessons activates each stage of the self-regulation cycle: planning, monitoring, evaluating and regulating.


We’ve created a simple PowerPoint tool that will facilitate your delivery of metacognitive questions in lessons whenever you use a video: regardless of the school subject or videos topic. It allows you to instantly generate metacognitive questions for each stage of the metacognition process using an integrated menu:

Student are then presented with one of thirty-six slides like the ones depicted below, each contained 3 of 108 questions aiming to trigger metacognitive reflection, awareness and knowledge:



You can download a free sample of the resource here – it’s perfectly easy to use in your lessons and requires no preparation. The demo version contains 6/36 slides (18/108 questions).


The full version contains the complete array of 108 questions and access to all 36 slides: this makes the resource almost infinitely reusable. Furthermore, unlike the demo version, the full version is fully editable so that teachers can add their own metacognitive questions. Click here to download the full version. If you are a membership plan holder please visit the Members Area to download it for free.