1st Edition

Metacognition and Study Skills: A Guide for Teachers

By Jonathan Firth Copyright 2025
182 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

182 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

182 Pages 4 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Pupils often make poor choices when it comes to independent learning because they don’t intuitively understand how to learn. In the classroom too, they typically misjudge how well they understand new concepts, overestimate the accuracy of their own examples and underestimate how much they forget. This book reveals how a metacognitive approach to teaching can help overcome these challenges and... Read more

Introduction  1. The Logic of Focusing on How to Learn  2. The Shifting Sands of Memory  3. Low-Hanging Metacognitive Fruit  4. In the Classroom, pt. 1: Before the Task  5. In the Classroom, pt. 2: During the Task  6. In the Classroom, pt. 3: After the Task  7. A Metacognitive Approach to Literacy  8. Metacognition Unplugged  9. Self-Regulated Study Skills  10. Elevating Projects to the Metacognitive Level  11. A Culture of Metacognition in the Classroom  12. A Metacognition Manifesto

Biography

Jonathan Firth is a teacher, author, and researcher. Having taught psychology at secondary school level for many years, he now works at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, leading lectures and seminars on undergraduate and postgraduate courses, carrying out research, and supervising students.