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How to use metacognition

1. Build pupils’ metacognitive knowledge

Help learners understand how they learn, including:

  • Knowledge of themselves as learners (strengths, weaknesses)
  • Knowledge of effective strategies
  • Knowledge of different task types

2. Explicitly teach planning, monitoring, and evaluating

Teach metacognitive strategies directly and within subject content.
Use a clear learning cycle: Plan → Monitor → Evaluate.


3. Introduce strategies in real tasks, not generic “thinking skills”

Metacognition is domain‑specific.
Show students how to apply strategies in specific subjects, specific tasks, and real curriculum content.


4. Model your thinking (“think alouds”)

Verbalise your thought process as an expert learner:

  • What you notice
  • How you select strategies
  • How you check understanding
    This makes invisible thinking visible.

5. Use purposeful, structured metacognitive talk

Encourage pupils to discuss:

  • What they already know
  • Why they chose a strategy
  • What evidence supports their thinking
    Use question stems and dialogic techniques.

6. Set the right level of challenge

Challenge is necessary for metacognitive growth, but avoid cognitive overload.
Use:

  • Scaffolds
  • Worked examples
  • Gradual release (“I do → We do → You do”)

7. Teach pupils to organise and manage their independent learning

Show pupils how to revise, plan, stay motivated, and check progress.
Examples include:

  • Checklists
  • Distributed practice schedules
  • Self‑quizzing

8. Withdraw scaffolds gradually

Ensure modelling and support fade over time so pupils internalise strategies.
Avoid keeping scaffolds for too long; the goal is autonomous strategy use.


9. Embed metacognition through consistent whole‑school approaches

Effective implementation needs:

  • Shared language
  • Training and time
  • Monitoring and adaptation
    Metacognition should be woven into normal practice, not bolted on.

10. Assess metacognition during learning

Use:

  • Observation
  • Talk‑aloud protocols
  • Traces (notes, highlighting, strategy use)
  • Self‑report tools (with caution)
    Assessment helps you see whether pupils are applying strategies—not just naming them.

Find out more!

There is a more detailed report, and various helpful tools and documents from the EEF…

I am an Assistant Headteacher with a keen interest in curriculum, teaching and learning, and leadership development. With this site I hope to share with you, in condensed form, some of the key books and ideas which have helped me over the years. I hope you will find the summaries useful, and you will go on to buy the books or visit the author's own sites.