Visual analyses and discriminations: one approach to measuring students' metacognition.
Author: Al Hilawani YA.
Source:
American Annals of the Deaf, 151(1), 16-24.
THE METACOGNITIVE performance of four groups of students was examined. The
students' processes of visual analysis and discrimination of real-life pictures
were used to measure metacognition. There were 61 participants: 18 hearing
students, 18 deaf and hard of hearing students, 16 students with mild mental
disabilities, and 9 students with physical disabilities. Analysis revealed no
significant differences among hearing students, deaf and hard of hearing
students, and students with physical disabilities. The performance of these three
groups of students was significantly better than the performance of students with
mild mental disabilities. It appears that students with mild mental disabilities
encountered difficulties with pictures that required complex visual analyses and
discriminations. These difficulties were manifested in a form of deficient
simultaneous visual processing along with a low level of knowledge acquisition.