Unskilled but subjectively aware: Metacognitive monitoring ability and respective awareness in low-performing students

Händel M, Fritzsche E (2016)


Publication Status: Published

Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2016

Journal

Book Volume: 44

Pages Range: 229-241

Journal Issue: 2

DOI: 10.3758/s13421-015-0552-0

Abstract

Two studies were conducted to further examine the unskilled-and-unaware effect and to test whether low-performing students are indeed unaware of their (expected) lower metacognitive monitoring abilities. Postdicted judgments of performance and second-order judgments (SOJs) were solicited to test students’ metacognitive awareness. Given that global and local judgments tend to differ (the confidence–frequency effect), we investigated whether students’ (un)awareness pertains to both types of judgments. A first study focusing on global judgments was conducted in a regular exam setting with 196 undergraduate education students. A second study with 115 undergraduate education students examined both global and local judgments. Local judgments were analyzed on an average level and according to different signal detection theory categories (hits, correct rejections, misses, and false alarms). In both studies, students were grouped in four performance quartiles. The results showed that low-performing students highly overestimated their performance (they were functionally overconfident). However, their SOJs indicated that they were less confident in their judgments than the other students, and thus seemed to be aware of their low ability to estimate their own performance (they were not subjectively overconfident). This was observed for global as well as for averaged local SOJs. Moreover, an analysis of the local judgments revealed that students’ SOJs varied depending not only on whether their judgments were accurate but also on whether or not they thought they knew the answer to an item. In sum, SOJs provide valuable information about students’ metacognitive awareness.

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APA:

Händel, M., & Fritzsche, E. (2016). Unskilled but subjectively aware: Metacognitive monitoring ability and respective awareness in low-performing students. Memory and Cognition, 44(2), 229-241. https://dx.doi.org/10.3758/s13421-015-0552-0

MLA:

Händel, Marion, and Eva Fritzsche. "Unskilled but subjectively aware: Metacognitive monitoring ability and respective awareness in low-performing students." Memory and Cognition 44.2 (2016): 229-241.

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