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Glossary›Metacognition

Glossary

Metacognition

The capacity to observe, understand, and regulate one's own cognitive processes—commonly described as 'thinking about thinking.'

What is Metacognition?

Metacognition is cognition about cognition—the human capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate one’s own mental processes. The term comes from the Greek prefix ‘meta,’ meaning ‘beyond’ or ‘on top of,’ combined with the Latin ‘cognitio,’ meaning knowledge or knowing. In practice, metacognition encompasses awareness of how you learn, plan, remember, and solve problems, as well as the ability to adjust those strategies in real time.

John H. Flavell defined metacognition as knowledge about cognition and control of cognition. When you notice you’re having more trouble learning concept A than concept B, or when you pause to double-check a conclusion before accepting it as fact, you’re engaging in metacognition. It operates both consciously—as when you deliberately select a study strategy—and unconsciously, as automatic assessments of confidence or difficulty.

Metacognition involves two components: knowledge about cognition and regulation of cognition. Knowledge includes understanding your own cognitive strengths, limitations, and the strategies available to you. Regulation involves planning how to approach a task, monitoring your progress, and evaluating outcomes. Together, these capacities enable what researchers call ‘executive control’ over thinking itself.

Origins & Lineage

The term ‘metacognition’ was introduced by John Flavell in the early 1970s based on the term ‘metamemory’ previously conceived by the same scholar (Flavell 1971). John Flavell of Stanford University is regarded as a foundation researcher in metacognition. He was influenced by the work of Jean Piaget. Flavell’s 1963 book, The Developmental Psychology of Jean Piaget, brought Piagetian concepts to American psychology and profoundly shaped his thinking about children’s awareness of their own mental processes.

Flavell (1971) used the term metamemory in regard to an individual’s ability to manage and monitor the input, storage, search and retrieval of the contents of his own memory. By 1979, he had expanded this into a formal model of metacognition. In his 1979 paper, Flavell proposed a formal model of metacognitive monitoring to include four classes of phenomena: (a) metacognitive knowledge, (b) metacognitive experiences, © tasks or goals, and (d) strategies or activities.

While Flavell formalized the construct within developmental psychology, the roots of metacognition trace back to ancient Greek philosophy in the 4th century BCE, where thinkers emphasized self-examination and reflection on knowledge. Introspection—a technique used by early psychologists to examine their own conscious experience—represented an early, informal interest in metacognitive processes.

How It’s Practiced

Metacognition is not a single technique but a set of capacities that can be cultivated and refined. In educational contexts, it appears as self-questioning during learning: Do I understand this? What strategy should I use? How confident am I in this answer? Students practicing metacognition might pause to assess whether rereading or summarizing would better serve their comprehension, then adjust accordingly.

Recent research on meta-awareness and metacognition, along with contemporary contemplative studies focused on mindfulness-based programs and other forms of meditation, appears to confirm a correlation between certain meditation practices and the development of processes compatible with critical meta-awareness, and between critical meta-awareness and increased psychological well-being. Buddhist meditation employs internally guided techniques (e.g., Samatha or Vipassana) to cultivate meta-awareness, allowing practitioners to observe thoughts, emotions, and sensations non-judgmentally.

In clinical psychology, metacognitive therapy (MCT) is a psychotherapy focused on modifying metacognitive beliefs that perpetuate states of worry, rumination and attention fixation. It was created by Adrian Wells based on an information processing model by Wells and Gerald Matthews. MCT developer Adrian Wells shows that much psychological distress results from how a person responds to negative thoughts and beliefs—for example, by ruminating or worrying—rather than the content of those thoughts. Techniques such as the attention training technique require the patient to engage in selective attention, divided attention, and attention switching, designed to increase executive control and regain attentional flexibility.

Metacognition Today

Metacognition has become central to education reform, particularly in efforts to teach students ‘how to learn.’ Teachers model their thought processes aloud, prompt self-reflection, and teach explicit strategies for planning, monitoring, and evaluating learning. The Education Endowment Foundation and similar bodies have identified metacognitive instruction as among the most cost-effective interventions for improving academic outcomes.

In contemplative communities, metacognition intersects with mindfulness and insight meditation. Retreat centers, mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) programs, and insight meditation communities cultivate meta-awareness as practitioners learn to observe mental processes without identification or reactivity. The Buddhist tradition includes contemplative practices specifically designed to cultivate various forms and degrees of critical meta-awareness.

In clinical settings, metacognitive therapy is offered for anxiety disorders, depression, PTSD, and OCD. Metacognitive therapy (MCT) is proving to be an effective treatment for anxiety and depression with effects that may exceed CBT. It has been described as a paradigm shift in psychotherapy in its theory-driven cognitive science approach. Practitioners trained in MCT work in private practice, hospitals, and university clinics, particularly in the UK and Scandinavia.

Common Misconceptions

Metacognition is not mere self-awareness or introspection. While it involves noticing one’s thoughts, it specifically concerns the regulation of cognitive processes—adjusting strategies, correcting errors, and managing attention. Simply thinking about your day is not metacognition; noticing that you’re stuck in unproductive rumination and choosing to redirect attention is.

It is also not synonymous with mindfulness, though the two overlap. Many terminological problems relate to differences in meaning of constructs within the traditional Buddhist context and current research—the term ‘mindfulness’ is a prominent example. Mindfulness emphasizes present-moment, non-judgmental awareness; metacognition emphasizes the strategic regulation of thinking. Some contemplative practices cultivate metacognitive capacities; others do not.

Finally, metacognition is not a fixed trait. While metacognition is adaptive, and found in other animals, we should not assume that all human forms of metacognition are gene-based adaptations. Instead, some forms may have a social origin. There is evidence that each of these abilities depends on cultural learning. It can be taught, practiced, and improved across the lifespan.

How to Begin

For those interested in developing metacognitive capacities, the most direct entry point is deliberate self-monitoring during any cognitive task. After reading a paragraph, pause and ask: Can I summarize this in my own words? What do I still not understand? After solving a problem, reflect: What strategy did I use? Would a different approach have been more efficient?

For educators and students, Ann Brown and Joseph Campione’s work on reciprocal teaching and self-regulated learning offers practical frameworks. The Education Endowment Foundation’s guidance reports provide evidence-based strategies for classroom implementation.

For those drawn to contemplative approaches, insight meditation (vipassana) traditions explicitly train meta-awareness. Sharon Salzberg’s Real Happiness and Joseph Goldstein’s The Experience of Insight offer accessible introductions. Secular mindfulness programs such as MBSR, while not exclusively metacognitive, include meta-awareness as a component.

For clinical applications, Adrian Wells’s Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression (2009) is the definitive text. MCT-trained therapists can be located through professional directories in the UK, Norway, and increasingly in North America. The approach is brief—typically 8–12 sessions—and emphasizes changing the process of thinking rather than challenging thought content.

Related terms

mindfulnessvipassanaself inquirycontemplative practicecognitive behavioral therapyexecutive function
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