Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance Contributes to Students’ Expression of Healthy Drinking Principles as Part of Biology Teaching
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Drinking-Related Nutritional Literacy and Its Relationship to 21st-Century Health
2.2. Metacognition and 21st-Century Skills
2.3. The Importance of Metacognition in Maintaining Health
2.4. Research Rationale
3. Method
3.1. Research Design
3.2. Participants
3.3. Intervention
3.4. Research Tools
3.5. Data Analysis
4. Results
4.1. The Contribution of Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance to the Development of Metacognitive Awareness Concerning Healthy Drinking
4.2. The Contribution of Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance to Students’ Expression of the Principles and Importance of Healthy Drinking as Part of Their Metacognitive Awareness Thinking Process
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Examples of Questions—Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance
- Consider the activity you planned—what were your goals?
- Will the activity I prepared help kids drink more water?
- Is the activity I prepare help kids drink fewer soft drinks?
- Describe a moment when you stopped to consider whether this activity will really make kids drink more water and/or fewer SSBs.
- What was the difficulty? How was it solved?
- Explain why the kids who participated in the activity would drink more water.
- Explain why the kids who participated in the activity would drink fewer soft drinks.
- Explain why the kids who participated in the activity would not drink fewer soft drinks.
- If you had to prepare the activity all over again, what would you do differently?
- To what degree has preparation of the activity made you drink more water?
- To what degree has preparation of the activity made you drink fewer soft drinks?
- How has preparation of the activity for first and second graders affected your behavior? Elaborate.
Appendix B. Examples of Questions—in-Depth Interview
- How much did you understand what you need to do on your activity to help children drink more water and fewer SSBs?
- Give an example of a case where you paused to consider whether the activity will actually help children drink more water.
- Did you run into any difficulties in planning the activity to encourage drinking more water and fewer SSBs?
- In your opinion, how much will the activity you facilitated actually help children drink fewer SSBs? Explain what specific part of the activity will help them reduce the consumption of SSBs.
- In your opinion, how much will the activity you facilitated achieve its goal to increase water drinking and decrease SSB consumption?
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Theoretical Definition | Operational Definition | Examples | |
---|---|---|---|
Planning | Setting goals and finding resources. | Students plan ahead, set goals. Do X to achieve Y. Indicative phrases include: in order to, so as to, aiming to Explicit planning | Drink water, it is very important to succeed today in training, it is important to drink enough water. |
Monitoring | Assessing performance throughout the process. | Students point out monitoring (assessment of behavior/attitudes/knowledge throughout the process) | Did you bring water for the exam? I heard it helps to concentrate. |
Evaluation | Evaluation at the end of the learning process. | Students conduct a retrospective evaluation If I had drunk enough, I would have aced the test/competition. | I was thirsty but I did not have the energy to go and get a drink. I did not think that it could help me on the test. Too bad I didn’t drink enough. |
Meta (n = 207) | Control (n = 195) | Time | Group | Time x Group | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Pre M (SD) | Post M (SD) | Pre M (SD) | Post M (SD) | F (1, 398) (η2) | F (1, 398) (η2) | F (1, 398) (η2) | |
Total score | 3.57 (0.76) | 3.79 (0.74) | 3.62 (0.74) | 3.67 (0.76) | 1.53 (0.004) | 0.66 (0.002) | 5.07 * (0.013) |
Planning about water | 4.29 (0.62) | 4.52 (0.56) | 4.37 (0.60) | 4.41 (0.60) | 1.83 (0.005) | 0.21 (0.001) | 8.34 ** (0.021) |
Planning about SSBs | 4.05 (0.98) | 4.40 (0.75) | 3.90 (1.06) | 4.11 (0.98) | 6.25 * (0.015) | 10.05 ** (0.025) | 9.49 ** (0.023) |
Monitoring | 3.87 (0.90) | 4.10 (0.84) | 3.86 (0.85) | 4.05 (0.86) | 4.42 * (0.011) | 0.47 (0.001) | 0.79 (0.002) |
Evaluation | 2.82 (1.14) | 2.99 (1.18) | 2.93 (1.08) | 2.89 (1.25) | 0.01 (0.001) | 0.01 (0.001) | 1.85 (0.005) |
A (interviews) | Meta | Control |
Increasing consumption of water |
|
|
Decreasing consumption of SSB |
|
|
Analysis of difference between control group and meta group*** | Clear evidence of planning to drink more water themselves, such as purchasing a flask or designating a water bottle to bring to school. As for reducing SSB consumption, students emphasize that it is important that their staged performance includes everyday situations illustrating the notion that consuming sweetened beverages leads to tooth decay. That is, they plan what elements the activity should include to convey a warning message about SSBs. | Control group students drink more water and understand why it is important, but there is no process of goal setting and planning in the context of drinking more water. As for reducing SSB consumption, there is no evidence of planning what elements the learning activity should include in order to get pupils to cut down on sweetened beverages. Control group students understand that they need to convey the notion that SSBs lead to tooth decay. |
B (scripts) | Meta | Control |
|
| |
Analysis of difference between control group and meta group | The performance script shows evidence of planning: Team C exhibits planning to drink water and avoid dehydration, while members of Team D plan to place a jug of water on the table and to have a drink of water before an exam to improve focus. In Team E, a strategy was applied where every sibling that has a drink of water reminds the other sibling to do the same. Two methods were applied to reduce SSB consumption: diluting sweetened juice with water, and simply not buying sweetened juice on one’s next visit to the grocery store. These tactics indicate planning: how to drink more water, how to drink less sweetened juice. | The performance script indicates that the students understand why it is important to hydrate: they understand that drinking water improves focus and SSB increases the chance of tooth decay. Yet there is no indication of planning how to reduce SSB consumption, and only limited indication of planning to drink water—before taking an exam to improve focus. |
A (interviews) | Meta | Control |
Examining whether the prepared activity can actually influence behavior |
|
|
Examining how explaining the process of reducing SSB consumption is difficult |
|
|
Analysis of difference between control group and meta group*** | Students of this group can clearly be seen monitoring their progress. They stop to consider whether what they have prepared will actually help pupils change their behavior, and which of their ideas best serves the goal they had set—getting pupils to drink more water and fewer SSBs. They also paused to consider the difficulties that pupils might face in attempting to reduce SSB consumption, and planned how to help them overcome these obstacles. | The students are focused on the pricing of the in-game water plants instead of changing the everyday behavior of the younger pupils. The students understand the need to drink more water and fewer SSBs. They understand that it is important to show the hazards of SSBs and that simply listing those hazardous by-products on the board will not reduce their consumption by the pupils. Only a few of the control group students realize how difficult it is to cut down on SSBs, perhaps indicating that they did not give this aspect much thought. |
B (scripts) | Meta | Control |
Interviews | ||
|
| |
Analysis of difference between control group and meta group | The scripts written by the meta group indicate they received metacognitive guidance. They pause to consider whether their behavior would help them succeed on an exam, that is, whether they had hydrated properly. | Hardly any of the scripts prepared by the control group contain evidence of monitoring a person’s behavior for change. There is reference to knowledge about the potential hazards of SSBs, and reference to external factors such as the teacher as some sort of monitoring figure. |
A (interviews) | Meta | Control |
Evaluation of the activity’s success in changing behavior |
|
|
Evaluation of changes in behavior of the students themselves |
|
|
Analysis of difference between control group and meta group*** | Meta group students show that they critically examine their achievements at the end of the process and contemplate what actually made the younger pupils hydrate better. The students also express contentment at having facilitated such activities, drawing a positive connection between these activities and healthier drinking. The excerpts show that they appreciate the changes in their own behavior—consuming less SSBs. | We can see no proper process of evaluation—the students did not verify whether the younger pupils drank more water or less SSBs following the learning activity. The control group students do not go beyond the stage of knowledge transfer—referring only to the fact that they did their part in presenting this knowledge before the pupils. They also hardly refer to evaluating their own change in drinking behavior. |
B (scripts) | Meta | Control |
Interviews | ||
|
| |
Analysis of difference between control group and meta group | The excerpts indicate that students evaluate at the end of a process what was the most appropriate course of action. They evaluate why they had not succeeded on an exam or a sports competition and conclude that a failure can be related to not having hydrated enough. | Evidence indicates the students know that it is important to hydrate in order to improve focus. There is no evidence of an evaluation process. The student testifies she learned from experience that in the future she should drink water. |
Aspect of Metacognitive Regulation | Excerpts from Student Replies | Analysis of the Evidence of Metacognitive Awareness |
---|---|---|
Planning |
| These excerpts clearly indicate that the students contemplate what they need to do to get the younger pupils to adopt the notion that drinking more water and less SSB is healthier for them. The students plan what are the most important elements to include so that the activity succeeds in changing the younger pupils’ behavior. |
Monitoring |
| Students that received metacognitive guidance monitor their progress on numerous occasions throughout the process. They examine whether the activity they prepared will actually help younger pupils drink more water and less SSBs. They also consider which elements of the intended change might be more difficult for the pupils, and what the learning activity can include to respond to these difficulties and to better support the change. |
Evaluating |
| While students refer to the learning activity itself, they do not refer to changes in their own behavior, past or present. |
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Zion, M.; Cohen, H. Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance Contributes to Students’ Expression of Healthy Drinking Principles as Part of Biology Teaching. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041939
Zion M, Cohen H. Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance Contributes to Students’ Expression of Healthy Drinking Principles as Part of Biology Teaching. Sustainability. 2021; 13(4):1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041939
Chicago/Turabian StyleZion, Michal, and Hagit Cohen. 2021. "Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance Contributes to Students’ Expression of Healthy Drinking Principles as Part of Biology Teaching" Sustainability 13, no. 4: 1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041939
APA StyleZion, M., & Cohen, H. (2021). Drinking-Related Metacognitive Guidance Contributes to Students’ Expression of Healthy Drinking Principles as Part of Biology Teaching. Sustainability, 13(4), 1939. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041939