Thinking about thinking—the process of reflecting on, monitoring, and regulating one's own cognitive processes. Metacognition encompasses what we
know about our own knowing, how we evaluate our own thinking, and how we control our own cognitive activities. It includes metacognitive
knowledge (understanding what we know and don't know, what strategies
work for us), metacognitive monitoring (checking our comprehension, tracking our progress), and metacognitive control (adjusting strategies, allocating attention, seeking help). Metacognition is what enables self-directed learning, critical thinking, and
intellectual growth—the capacity to step
back from our own thoughts and ask: Am I understanding this? Is this strategy working? What else should I consider? It's the difference between simply thinking and thinking about thinking, between knowing and knowing that you know.
Example: "He didn't just study—he practiced metacognition, constantly checking his understanding, adjusting his approach, reflecting on what
worked and what didn't. He wasn't smarter than his classmates; he just thought about his
thinking while they just thought."