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Reimagining Online STEM: Why Identity, Culture and Access Matter
Norfolk Research School
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By Rachael Wilson, Deputy Director of Norfolk Research School
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The Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) has now published the updated Guidance Report on Metacognition and Self-Regulated Learning, following a comprehensive new evidence review. This refreshed report builds on one of the most significant evidence bases for improving pupil outcomes — and its findings are well worth exploring.
The updated evidence strengthens the case for metacognitive approaches, with the estimated impact now at around eight months’ additional progress for disadvantaged pupils. This places metacognition among the most effective, evidence-based strategies for closing attainment gaps.
Key Updates
These changes mark a welcome evolution — from understanding metacognition as a concept to enabling it as everyday practice. The renewed emphasis on teacher agency, classroom dialogue, and being better at identifying proxies for learning will resonate with current work across subjects, particularly in mathematics, where metacognitive talk has already been a focus.
The updated Guidance Report on Metacognition and Self-Regulated Learning and accompanying evidence review are now available on the EEF website.
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