Title: Metacognitive Journaling, Gender, and Achievement
1Meta-cognitive Journaling, Gender, and
Achievement
- What questions can research answer?
2About Writing
- Remember how complex the act of
- writing is
- being both creative and analytical
- thinking inwardly and outwardly
- understanding the topic
3Week in Review
- As an individual, respond to this prompt
- What were the three or four most significant
ideas, activities, experiences, etc., of the
Winter Conference? - .
- .
- .
4Week in Reviewnext
- Step 2 Meet with a group of 3-5. If you dont
know each other, introduce yourself. Each group
member shares his or her list while the others
listen. When all are done, the group discusses
the lists to create one list with no more than 5
items on it. One person records the 5 items a
different person shares the items (or the list is
simply turned in).
5Suggested Note-taking
- Cornell Notes
- Make Two Columns (1/3 and 2/3)
- Column 1 (the 1/3) Label Questions, comments,
possible applications - Column 2 (the 2/3) Label Notes
6Laying the Groundwork for RTI
- What is core?
- What data or assessment?
- Can we use the WASL?
- Im not sure about my intervention toolbox. Who
has these? - Talk to leadership.
- RTI is not Special Edits Gen Ed
- Core, Strategic, and Intense Levels
- Data-driven
- Universal Screening Assessment
- Core Strategies for T and L
- Intervention for Struggling Students
- Progress Monitoring
- PLCs
7About Writing
- How can I know what I think until I see
- what I say? (E.M. Forster)
- In a classroom, whose thinking is important? Who
needs to see?
8About Writing and Learning
- We dont write to display understanding, but to
acquire understanding. - Writing teaches.
- That simple fact explains why students need
writing in the content areas. - The process of composing thoughts moves students
from a muddle of isolated facts toward an order
of integrated knowledge. - Thats usually called understanding.
- Carl Luty (NEA)
9The Background
10The 1970s
- Writing
- 1971 Janet Emig defines Writing to Learn in
her seminal dissertation while teaching high
school English
- Meta-cognition and
- Self-regulation
- 1979 Flavell defines Meta-cognition
- Bandura refines the concept of self-regulation
11The 1980s and 1990s
- Writing
- Schunk and Swartz (1993)
- Zimmerman and Kitsunias (1997)
- Meta-cognition and Self-regulation
12The 2000s
- Writing
- From BYU (2000)
- Bazerman, Little, Bethel (2005)
- Meta-cognition and
- Self-regulation
- Bond (2004)
-
13Definitions
- Writing
- Meta-cognition
- Self-regulation
- Self-efficacy
14About your notes
- The LINE OF LEARNING
- Stopthink.wonder.remember
15Current Research
16Self-reflection, Gender, and Science Achievement
- 2005
- Dissertation done for Seattle Pacific University
- Arthur Ellis, Chair, William Nagy and Sandra
Bond, Committee Members
17Foundations
- Rousseau
- let him discover he has the tools
- teacher controls the environment
- Dewey
- she needs continuity and interaction
- teacher arouses an active question
-
18Foundations
- Piaget
- his knowing means acting
- teacher appeals to autonomous forces
- Bandura
- she learns via a continuous reciprocal
interaction - teacher offers models and reinforcement
19Theory and Research
- Control
- McCombs (1991)
- Eshel and Kohavi (2003)
- Metacognition and Self-regulation
- Flavell (1977)
- Peklaj and Pecjak (2002)
20Theory and Research
- Reflection
- Zimmerman (1998)
- Hartlep and Forsyth (2000)
- Gender
- Gurian and Stevens (2004)
- Pajares (2003)
21Sample Who and How
- Subjects 175 high school biology students in six
class periods with one teacher. - Sampling convenience sample.
- Random assignment to intervention group.
22Sample Who and How
- Subjects 175 high school biology students in six
class periods with one teacher. - Sampling convenience sample.
- Random assignment to intervention group.
23Question 1 and 2 Is there an achievement
difference between students who reflect and those
who do not?
- No significant differences between those who
reflect and those who do not.
24Question 3 Are the intervention group effects
different for males and females?
- No statistically significant difference with
Univariate ANOVA for post or retention test or
for Time x Intervention x Gender with Repeated
Measures ANOVA. - Statistically significant Time x Intervention and
Time x Gender (reflection lower males lower).
25Figure 1 General ANOVA
26Figure 3 (Time x Gender)
27Question 4 Is there an achievement difference
between students who reflect and those who
reflect and receive feedback?
- Univariate ANOVA No significant difference
between those who do and do not receive feedback. - Repeated-measures Significant difference between
those who reflect and other 2 groups.
28Data Analysis
- Question 1 and 2
- Univariate ANOVA
- Question 3
- Univariate ANOVA
- 3 x3 x 2 repeated measures mixed ANOVA
- Question 4
- Univariate ANOVA
29Overall Conclusions
30Discussion Implications
- Question 1 and 2 Lack of significant
differences (reflection and no reflection) is
quite different from research. Students who
reflect had the lowest scores. - Question 3 Over time, those who reflect with no
feedback have significantly lower achievement
slope. - Question 4 Significant difference between
reflect and reflect with feedback groups, but no
difference between reflect with feedback and
control groups. Reflect with feedback scores
highest for all three test times.
31Questions for Future Research
- Does a block schedule have any effect on
achievement? - Which metacognitive strategies are best suited
for high school students? Which prompts? - Does peer feedback make a difference in
achievement? - Is there a difference in self-efficacy between
adolescent males and females? Is there a
correlation between self-efficacy and
achievement? - Does the length and complexity of reflective
journals correlate with achievement?
32About your notes
- The LINE OF LEARNING
- Stopthink.wonder.remember
- What questions should be considered?
33The Present
- Mindset (Dweck, 2006)
- Schunk and Zimmerman (2007)
- Pajares (2007)
34What the research shows
- We know that high self-efficacy, use of
self-reflection and meta-cognition may raise
achievement. - We know that self-reflection can raise
self-efficacy. - We know that students have higher self-efficacy
and achievement when they have control and
choice. - We know that journal writing has the potential to
allow students choice, control, meta-cognition
practice, and ongoing self-reflection.
35About Feedback
- What does this research suggest?
36About your notes
- The LINE OF LEARNING
- Stopthink.wonder.remember what you know about
Feedback. On what occasion did it really work
for you as a learner?
37Butler and Nisan (1986)
- Prescriptive Feedback or Descriptive Feedback of
No Feedbackfor quantitative work? for
divergent-thinking work? - Results when students were given a variety of
feedback variations on three sessions of student
work
38Results, continued
- Receiving descriptive feedback on task 1 led to
better performance on next two tasks and
increased student motivation. - Receiving prescriptive feedback on task 1 led to
better performance on quantitative task but lower
performance on divergent-thinking. Student
motivation decreased. - No feedback led to poor continued performance and
decrease in motivation.
39About Feedbackthe RBDs
- Kluger and DeNisi (1996) did a meta-analysis of
research on feedback. Findings - Average effect size of feedback on performance is
.41, equal to moving from the 50th to 66th
percentile. - More than 38 percent of the studies embedded in
that .41 indicated that control groups
outperformed feedback groups
40Four levels of feedback
- FB about the task (are answers right or wrong
are directions being followed) - FB about process used in the task (info about
strategies used or which might be used)
- FB about self-regulation (info about student
self-evaluation or confidence) - FB about the student as a person (statements such
as You are so smart/good/clever!)
41More current research
- Hattie and Timperely (2007) found
- Feedback primary use to the formative process
- Feedback may be the information which drives or
derails the formative process - Are you helping students driveor are you
derailing them?
42Make strategic choices in
43What to do?
- Interactive is the absolute best..or a
demonstration/visual with interaction if that
fits. - If you offer written feedback, write on the
rubric or title page.
44Make strategic choices in
45What to do?
- Is the issue a special cause or a common cause?
- Common? Group.
- Special? Individual and interactive.
46Make strategic choices in
47What to do?
- Choose points of most relevance to the really big
or immediate learning goals.
48Make strategic choices in
49What to do?
- Offer immediate feedback for facts.
- Slight delay appropriate for deeper review.
- Knowledge of results imperative for continuous
student learning improvement.
50So
- The effect of feedback on achievement depends on
the feedback itself. - Proper feedback fosters interest/focus on task
for its own sake, affecting performance and
motivation.
51What to do in the classroom?
- Student control/choice
- Frequent teacher and peer modeling of writing
strategies - Focus on process, not outcome
- Feedback which offers focus and support, not
evaluation - Writing to learn done frequently
52Dear Confused,
- You may be really lost in all this conversation
about metacognition, gender, feedback, and
self-evaluation. Somehow, though, I think Im
starting to get it. Let me try to help you
understand as well. - Lets start with metacognition..the big MC. I
like to think of it that way, because really, my
thinking is the Big MC in my head which
53Local resources
- John Bean, Seattle University
- http//www.mwp.hawaii.edu/resources/workshop_2008s
pring.pdf - Carmen Werder, WWU
- http//www.wwu.edu/wis/resources.shtml
- And..
- http//wac.colostate.edu/teaching/index.cfm?catego
ry3 - http//www.wastatelaser.org/_resources/sciencenote
booking.asp