z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
Thinking About Your Thinking: Metacognition and the Adolescentizing of Online Higher Education
Author(s) -
Angelina S. MacKewn,
Brian W. Donavant
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international education studies and sustainability
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2766-4562
pISSN - 2766-4554
DOI - 10.22158/iess.v1n2p22
Subject(s) - metacognition , leverage (statistics) , online learning , psychology , accountability , critical thinking , learning styles , medical education , pedagogy , mathematics education , political science , computer science , multimedia , medicine , cognition , machine learning , neuroscience , law
Online education is considered a modern landmark in Self-Directed Learning (SDL), but current trends place that characterization and the effectiveness of the delivery method in jeopardy. U.S. growth trends indicate increasing numbers and percentages of younger students entering virtual classrooms, compounded by wholesale shifts to online delivery in the wake of COVID-19. As the online arena transitions from working adults seeking educational access to entire undergraduate populations, online education appears to be evolving from an alternative delivery method into a ubiquitous form of higher education, thereby losing its identity as SDL and with all the pedagogical consequences such an evolution implies. Amid calls for increased student access and the continuing clamor for accountability, we examine differences in metacognitive awareness and regulation strategies in the multigenerational melting pot that has become undergraduate online education. While our findings indicate that younger students possess lower metacognitive capacity for maximizing online success and lead us to caution against wholesale implementation and its overuse for younger participants, we also offer considerations to help both faculty and institutions leverage the benefits of effective online delivery and encourage them to move beyond the stale methodologies that all too often separate motivated students from truly meaningful education.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here