We performed three experiments to examine the effects of repeated study–judgement–test sessions on metacognitive monitoring, and to see if better students (those with higher Scholastic Aptitude Test or SAT scores) outperform low SAT students. In all experiments, mean metacognitive accuracy (bias scores and Gamma correlations) did improve with practice. Most improvement involved students’ ability to predict which items would not be recalled later. In addition, students with high SAT scores recalled more items, were less overconfident, and adjusted their predictions more effectively. Thus, high SAT students may be able to adjust their metacognitive monitoring effectively without feedback, but low SAT students appear unlikely to do so. Educato...
Properly tuned metacognitive knowledge is important for setting up realistic learning goals. One of ...
College students in a lower-division psychology course made metacognitive judgments by predicting an...
An often-replicated finding in metacognition research is that children overestimate their performanc...
Background: Theory suggests that the accuracy of metacognitive monitoring is affected by the cues ...
In two semester-long studies, we examined whether college students could improve their ability to ac...
When people try to learn new information (e.g., in a school setting), they often have multiple oppor...
Being metacognitively accurate, or knowing what you know and do not know, has been correlated with a...
Students are overconfident when making grade predictions, and worse, the lowest-performing students ...
Metacognitive monitoring processes have been shown to be critical determinants of human learning. Me...
Much research on psychological testing in educational contexts has focused on issues to do with reli...
The present study examined the effects of a classroom intervention on students’ metacognitive monito...
Dirkx, K. J. H., Kester, L., & Kirschner, P. A. (2013, 27 August). The Effects of Testing on Meta-Co...
The aim of the present study was to explore students’ learning-related cognitions prior to an in-cla...
We explored whether exposure to different kinds of comprehension tests during elementary years influ...
© 2020, Eskisehir Osmangazi University. In this study, we examined monitoring accuracy during in cla...
Properly tuned metacognitive knowledge is important for setting up realistic learning goals. One of ...
College students in a lower-division psychology course made metacognitive judgments by predicting an...
An often-replicated finding in metacognition research is that children overestimate their performanc...
Background: Theory suggests that the accuracy of metacognitive monitoring is affected by the cues ...
In two semester-long studies, we examined whether college students could improve their ability to ac...
When people try to learn new information (e.g., in a school setting), they often have multiple oppor...
Being metacognitively accurate, or knowing what you know and do not know, has been correlated with a...
Students are overconfident when making grade predictions, and worse, the lowest-performing students ...
Metacognitive monitoring processes have been shown to be critical determinants of human learning. Me...
Much research on psychological testing in educational contexts has focused on issues to do with reli...
The present study examined the effects of a classroom intervention on students’ metacognitive monito...
Dirkx, K. J. H., Kester, L., & Kirschner, P. A. (2013, 27 August). The Effects of Testing on Meta-Co...
The aim of the present study was to explore students’ learning-related cognitions prior to an in-cla...
We explored whether exposure to different kinds of comprehension tests during elementary years influ...
© 2020, Eskisehir Osmangazi University. In this study, we examined monitoring accuracy during in cla...
Properly tuned metacognitive knowledge is important for setting up realistic learning goals. One of ...
College students in a lower-division psychology course made metacognitive judgments by predicting an...
An often-replicated finding in metacognition research is that children overestimate their performanc...