This tool-set guides you through the process of taking Future Classroom
Scenarios and using them as the inspiration for creating innovative Learning
Activities with the intention of bringing advanced approaches in learning and
teaching, supported by technology, to the classroom.
Future
classroom scenarios are intended to act as a vision of what may be possible and
desirable for the future of learning and teaching in your school. To make these
visions a reality a group of teachers should work together to create a set of
Learning Activities, which include the innovative ideas in a realistic and
practical context. A Learning Activity could be something that happens in a
single lesson or may take place over several lessons. An example of a Learning
Activity could be creating a video, or working outside of school to collect
data or images.
The starting point for designing a Learning Activity is to select, or
create a suitable Future Classroom Scenario. You then need to arrange some time
with a group of teachers to collaboratively design the Learning Activity.
PRINCIPLES FOR INNOVATIVE LEARNING.
1. Learners have to be at the
center of what happens in the classroom with activities focused on their
cognition and growth. They have to actively engage in learning in order to
become self-regulated learners who are able to control their emotions and
motivations during the study process, set goals, and monitor their own learning
process.
2. Learning is a social
practice and can’t happen alone. “By our nature we are social beings and we
learn by interacting,” Groff said. “We learn by pushing and pulling on concepts
with one another.” Structured, collaborative group work can be good for
all learners; it pushes people in different ways.
3. Emotions are an integral
part of learning.
Students understand ideas better when there’s interplay between emotions,
motivation and cognition, so positive beliefs about oneself are a core part of
reaching a more profound understanding. The power of emotions and motivation in the classroom are
well documented, but often overlooked because they are “soft.” Still most
teachers know that if a student is upset about something that happened at home
or in school, he won’t learn well. Similarly, keeping students motivated should
be the starting point of learning. If students understand why it matters,
learning becomes more important to them.
4. Learners are different and innovative
learning environments reflect the various experiences and prior knowledge that
each student brings to class. “You really want practices and processes that
help teachers engage each student where they are,” said Groff. This principle
is understood by every frustrated educator teaching to a “middle” that doesn’t
exist.
5. Students need to be
stretched, but not too much. “It’s really critical to find that
student’s sweet spot,” Groff Said. Educators should try to prevent both
coasting and overloading. Students need to experience both academic success and
the challenge of discovery. In a diverse classroom group work can help achieve
this as students at different levels help one another.
6. Assessment should be for
learning, not of learning. Assessments are important, but only to
gauge how to structure the next lesson for maximum effectiveness. It should be
meaningful, substantial, and shape the learning environment itself. “Good
teachers do this informally most of the time,” Groff said. “But when it’s done
well and more formally it’s a whole structure and methodology where you collect
feedback on the learning pathway and it drives the next step that you take.”
7. Learning needs to be
connected across disciplines and reach out into the real world.
Learning can’t be meaningful if students don’t understand why the knowledge
will be useful to them, how it can be applied in life. Understanding the
connections between subjects and ideas is essential for the ability to transfer
skills and adapt. “We can’t just have things remain in silos that never
interact,” Groff said.
IMPLEMENTING
THE PRINCIPLES
Many
of the seven principles outlined are second nature to good teachers, but they
can feel hard to achieve within education systems that are slow-moving,
bureaucratic and resistant to change. There are ways for teachers who want to
create an innovative learning environment to begin down the path, even without
the full support of their colleagues and administration. Shifting to the Common
Core could offer openings for building in these practices. It’s designed in a
way that condones a lot of the principles that we’ve been talking about.
Everyone
knows the common barriers educators face: the school culture, the students and
themselves. Some reflection and problem solving, teachers can often begin to
work around these barriers. An educator might think she’s open to innovation
without realizing that there are preconceived notions about how one should
teach that are deeply ingrained.
Educators
can also test ideas with students before implementing them. Students have been
indoctrinated into the same educational mindset about what makes a “useful” education
as everyone else, and some might be resistant to new teaching methodologies.
Without their enthusiasm it can be hard to persevere through other obstacles.

Thanks Martin for this Post. Actually I have just read about these seven principles for innovative learning from a certain site. Thanks
ReplyDeletelearners are truely different and need not to be over streched in this process of innovations. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteGreat post Martin. I like the bit about learning needs to be connected across disciplines. It supports the multiple intelligence theory and would help learners.
ReplyDeleteindeed, it could be helpful for educators to test ideas with students in order to really find out if they foster learning.
ReplyDelete