Hong Kong & Singapore teachers' knowledge of metacognitive instruction

Jessie EE, Ong Kim LEE, Swee Eng Audrey LIM

Research output: Contribution to conferencePapers

Abstract

Are teachers consciously aware of the strategies for enhancing the metacognitive processes of their students? To a large extent teachers' abilities to motivate and empower students to self-regulate their own learning processes is and has been the cause for concern among many educators even to date. Educators must focus on teaching students how to think, how to learn and to take active control over their own learning so that they are responsible for their own learning outcome. In this paper, a comparative study of teachers’ knowledge of metacognitive instruction in Hong Kong and Singapore were examined. MANOVA and a regression analysis were used to examine the patterns of teachers' knowledge of metacognitive instruction. The implications from the findings will be drawn with a view to enhance teacher education programmes.

Conference

ConferenceThe Asia-Pacific Educational Research Association (APERA) International Conference 2006: Educational Research, Policy and Practice in an Era of Globalization = 亞太教育研究學會國際研討會2006:全球化中的教育研究、政策與實踐
Abbreviated titleAPERA 2006
Country/TerritoryHong Kong
Period28/11/0630/11/06

Citation

EE, J., Lee, O. K., & Lim, S. E. A. (2006, November). Hong Kong & Singapore teachers' knowledge of metacognitive instruction. Paper presented at the Asia-Pacific Educational Research Association (APERA) International Conference 2006: Educational Research, Policy and Practice in an Era of Globalization, The Hong Kong Institute of Education, China.

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