metacognition: the key to acing courses! saundra y. mcguire, ph.d. assistant vice chancellor...

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Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center for Academic Success Louisiana State University

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Page 1: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Metacognition: The Key to Acing

Courses!

Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D.Assistant Vice ChancellorProfessor, Department of ChemistryPast Director, Center for Academic SuccessLouisiana State University

Page 2: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

2004 National College Learning Center AssociationFrank L. Christ Outstanding Learning Center Award 

Page 3: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Presidential Recognition White House Oval Office November 16, 2007

Page 4: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

The Story of Three Students

Travis, junior psychology student 47, 52, 82, 86 B in courseJoshua, first year chemistry student

68, 50, 50, 87, 87, 97, 90 (final) A in courseDana, first year physics student 80, 54, 91, 97, 90 (final) A in course

Page 5: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

How’d They Do It?

They became expert learners by using metacognition!

They studied to LEARN, not just to make the grade!

Page 6: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

What we will cover today

Why college students may be inefficient learnersMetacognitive learning strategies that work, and why they workBarriers to using these strategies and how to overcome them

Page 7: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Reflection Questions

What’s the difference, if any, betweenstudying and learning?

For which task would you work harder:A. Make an A on the testB. Teach the material to the class?

Page 8: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

To Ace Courses (and everything else!)

Stay in learn mode, not study mode

Study as if you have to teach the material, not just make an A on the test

Page 9: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Use Metacognition to Become an Expert

Learner

Page 10: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Metacognition

The ability to:think about thinkingbe consciously aware of oneself as a problem solverto monitor and control one’s mental processingto be aware of the type of learning that you are doing

Page 11: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Counting Vowels in 45 seconds

How accurate are you?

Count all the vowels in the words on the next slide.

Page 12: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Dollar BillDiceTricycleFour-leaf CloverHandSix-PackSeven-UpOctopus

Cat LivesBowling PinsFootball TeamDozen EggsUnlucky FridayValentine’s DayQuarter Hour

Page 13: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

How many words or phrases do you remember?

Page 14: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Let’s look at the words again…

What are they arranged according to?

Page 15: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

15

Dollar BillDiceTricycleFour-leaf CloverHandSix-PackSeven-UpOctopus

Cat LivesBowling PinsFootball TeamDozen EggsUnlucky FridayValentine’s DayQuarter Hour

What are the words arranged according to?

Page 16: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

NOW, how many words or phrases do you remember?

Page 17: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

What were two major

differences

between the 1st and 2nd

attempts?

Page 18: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

1. We knew what the task was

2. We knew how the information

was organized

Page 19: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Turning Yourself into an Efficient, Expert Learner

Do “think aloud” exercisesConstantly ask yourself “why” and “what if” questionsAlways test your understanding by verbalizing or writing about concepts; practice retrieval of informationMove your activities higher on the Bloom’s taxonomy scale by comparing and contrasting, thinking of analogies, thinking of new pathways, etc.

Page 20: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Evaluation

Synthesis

Analysis

Application

Comprehension

Knowledge

Making decisions and supporting views; requires

understanding of values.

Combining information to form a unique product; requires creativity and

originality.

Using information to solve problems; transferring abstract or theoretical

ideas to practical situations. Identifying

connections and relationships and how

they apply.Restating in

your own words;

paraphrasing, summarizing, translating.Memorizing verbatim

information. Being able to remember, but not

necessarily fully understanding the

material.

Bloom’s Taxonomy

Louisiana State University Center for Academic Success B-31 Coates Hall 225-578-2872 www.cas.lsu.edu

Identifying components; determining

arrangement, logic, and semantics.

Gra

du

ate

S

chool

Un

derg

rad

uat

eH

igh

Sch

ool

This pyramid depicts the different levels of thinking we use when learning. Notice how each level builds on the foundation that

precedes it. It is required that we learn the lower levels before we can effectively use the skills above.

Page 21: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

At what level of Bloom’s did you have to operate to make A’s or B’s in high school?

1. Knowledge2. Comprehension3. Application4. Analysis5. Synthesis6. Evaluation

Page 22: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

At what level of Bloom’s do you think you’ll have to operate to make A’s in college?

1. Knowledge2. Comprehension3. Application4. Analysis5. Synthesis6. Evaluation

Page 23: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

How do you move yourself higher on Bloom’s Taxonomy?

Use the Study Cycle with Intense Study Sessions!

Page 24: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

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3Revie

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The Study Cycle

1 Set a Goal (1-2 min) Decide what you want to accomplish in your study session

2 Study with Focus (30-50 min) Interact with material- organize, concept map, summarize, process, re-read, fill-in notes, reflect, etc.

3 Reward Yourself (10-15 min) Take a break– call a friend, play a short game, get a snack

4 Review (5 min) Go over what you just studied

*Intense Study Sessions

Attend

Review

Study

Attend class – GO TO CLASS! Answer and ask questions and take meaningful notes.

Preview before class – Skim the chapter, note headings and boldface words, review summaries and chapter objectives, and come up with questions you’d like the lecture to answer for you.

Review after class – As soon after class as possible, read notes, fill in gaps and note any questions.

Assess your Learning – Periodically perform reality checks• Am I using study methods that are effective?• Do I understand the material enough to teach it to others?

Preview

Center for Academic SuccessB-31 Coates Hall ▪ 225.578.2872 ▪www.cas.lsu.edu

Assess

Study – Repetition is the key. Ask questions such as ‘why’, ‘how’, and ‘what if’.

• Intense Study Sessions* - 3-5 short study sessions per day• Weekend Review – Read notes and material from the week to make

connections

Page 25: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Effective Metacognitive StrategiesAlways solve problems without looking at an example or the solutionMemorize everything you’re told to memorize (e.g. polyatomic ions)Always ask why, how, and what if questionsTest understanding by giving “mini lectures” on conceptsSpend time on chemistry every dayUse the Study Cycle with Intense Study SessionsAttend SI sessions on a regular basisAim for 100% mastery, not 90%!

Page 26: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Concept maps facilitate development

of higher order thinking skills

Page 27: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Chapter MapTitle of Chapter

Primary Headings

SubheadingsSecondary Subheadings

Page 28: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Compare and Contrast

Concept #1 Concept #2

How are they similar?

How are they different?

Page 29: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Time Management isLife Management

Page 30: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Big Rocks

The question is this:

What is the “moral of the story” when it comes to time management?

Is this jar full? What if we fill it to the top with small rocks…

would it be full?

What if we fill it to the top with water…would it be full?

What if we fill it to the top with sand…would it be full?

Page 31: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Tools for organizing your life:

Fixed Schedules “Semester-at-a-Peek”“Week-at-a-Peek”

PlannersTo Do Lists

TodayThis WeekSticky Notes

Page 32: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Tips to remember...

Use daylight hours wisely!

1 day light hour =about 1 1/2 evening

hours.

Page 33: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Get the Most from SI Sessions, Tutorial Centers, Office Hours,

and Study Groups

Try to understand the concept or work the problem by yourself firstCome prepared to ask questionsExplain the material to the tutor or instructor

Page 34: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Which One of the Next Two Slides More

Accurately Describes YOUR Actions to Date in

Your Courses?

Page 35: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Top 5 Reasons Folks Did Not Do Well on Test 1 in Chemistry 1201 in Fall 2009:

1. Didn’t spend enough time on the material2. Started the homework too late3. Didn’t memorize the information I needed to4. Did not use the book5. Assumed I understood information that I had read and re-read, but had not applied

Page 36: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Top 5 Reasons Folks Made an A on Test 1:

1. Did preview-review for every class2. Did a little of the homework at a time3. Used the book and did the suggested

problems4. Made flashcards of the information to be memorized5. Practiced explaining the information to

others

Page 37: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

The ABCs of Academic Success!

Attitude, Behavior, Commitment

Page 38: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Attitude

“It’s your attitude, not your aptitude,

that determines your altitude.”

Zig Ziglar

Page 39: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Behavior

It’s the difference between knowing

and doing that determines success.

Anonymous

Page 40: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Commitment

It’s not over ‘til it’s over, and only you can determine when it’s

over!

Page 41: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

So, What Can You Do, Starting Now, to Pursue Your 4.0 this quarter?

Spend more time studying (at least 2 hours/week for every hour in class)Aim for higher learning levels and 100% understandingUse office hours and study groups productivelyUse the Study Cycle

with Intense Study SessionsUse Metacognition to Study Smarter!!!

Page 42: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Writing Exercise

What behavior will you commit to changing?

Page 43: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

If you don’t start it within the next 48 hours...

… you probably never will.

Page 44: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Spring 2013 CBC Student Challenge

Average GPA of 3.8!No attendee with GPA less than 3.5Commitment to Personal and Group Excellence

Page 45: Metacognition: The Key to Acing Courses! Saundra Y. McGuire, Ph.D. Assistant Vice Chancellor Professor, Department of Chemistry Past Director, Center

Final Note

Please visit the CBC Tutor and Writing Center. You WILL benefit from their services!

Also visit www.cas.lsu.edu for on-line workshops and information that will teach you more effective study strategies. I wish you a fantastically successful future!

Dr. Saundra McGuire