2011
DOI: 10.1007/s11409-011-9083-7
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Training metacognition in the classroom: the influence of incentives and feedback on exam predictions

Abstract: In two semester-long studies, we examined whether college students could improve their ability to accurately predict their own exam performance across multiple exams. We tested whether providing concrete feedback and incentives (i.e., extra credit) for accuracy would improve predictions by improving students' metacognition, or awareness of their own knowledge. Students' predictions were almost always higher than the grade they earned and this was particularly true for low-performing students. Experiment 1 demo… Show more

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Cited by 140 publications
(149 citation statements)
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References 17 publications
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“…Calibration feedback, in the line with previous research (Krajč, 2008;Miller & Geraci, 2011;Ryvkin et al, 2012), seems to produce more promising results. Calibration feedback alone explained 26% of the variance in monitoring accuracy; 6% more than performance feedback did.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Calibration feedback, in the line with previous research (Krajč, 2008;Miller & Geraci, 2011;Ryvkin et al, 2012), seems to produce more promising results. Calibration feedback alone explained 26% of the variance in monitoring accuracy; 6% more than performance feedback did.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 81%
“…Therefore, calibration feedback provides information about the correctness of task performance as well as the accuracy of the metacognitive judgment regarding it. Most promising are mixed interventional designs that benefit from both repeated testing and provided feedback (Hacker, Bol, & Keener, 2008), especially in low performing students (Krajč, 2008;Miller & Geraci, 2011;Ryvkin, Krajč, & Ortmann, 2012). Nietfeld et al (2006) found a significant treatment effect (repeated testing) on monitoring accuracy and performance in students who received monitoring feedback (overall calibration and bias scores) but not in students who received no feedback.…”
Section: Interventions Fostering Metacognitionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Future efforts may target employing incentives, such as extra credit or participation points; though success using incentives is inconsistent. 18 Reduction in the number of peer-and self-assessments completed throughout the semester may alleviate assessment fatigue and increase thoughtful participation. Faculty may also consider promoting self-awareness of metacognition through teaching the purpose and usefulness of necessary skills as well as having students complete the "Metacognition Awareness Inventory" at the beginning and end of the semester.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…22,23 Providing individualized feedback for students may be a time-consuming endeavor for faculty and have conflicting results on metacognitive processes, as demonstrated previously. 12,18 In our study, two pharmacy residents who served as course co-coordinators split this responsibility. On average, each took approximately one hour per activity to draft and send comments for their respective group of seven to eight students, or roughly eight to 10 minutes per student.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A procedure that has been assumed to increase the accuracy of both adults' and children's monitoring processes involves providing external feedback to draw participants' attention to the fact that their performance was evaluated as poor (Butler, Karpicke, & Roediger, 2008;Efklides & Dina, 2004;Kornell & Rhodes, 2013;Metcalfe & Finn, 2011, 2012Miller & Geraci, 2011;Roll, Aleven, McLaren, & Koedinger, 2011). Nevertheless, although the positive influence of external feedback on adults' (Metcalfe & Finn, 2011) and older children's (Metcalfe & Finn, 2012) metacognitive judgments seems to be well established, to our knowledge, this effect has never been studied in participants under the age of 8 years.…”
Section: A Heuristic Accountmentioning
confidence: 99%