BFX 2017 Edu Catalogue

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How Student-driven Learning Environments Impact Student Outcomes BY PRAKASH NAIR

It’s a surprising fact that the top universities in the world actively recruit home-schooled students for their freshman class. The reason they do so is because these students have primarily been free to study what interests them most, and have “learned how to learn” while doing so. (Business Insider, Chris Weller, 2015) While standardised tests are too often the criteria upon which education outcomes are measured, acceptance into top post-secondary institutions is another good way to measure student outcomes for secondary schools. This criterion is an accurate gauge about the effectiveness of schooling. It goes beyond celebrating test-taking skills by also demonstrating the real-world value of student-directed learning. My clients include a wide range of school communities around the globe, from renowned IB (International Baccalaureate) schools to charter schools that serve challenged neighbourhoods. Despite their striking differences, they tend to have one thing in common; they agree that engaged students are motivated students and that engagement comes from involvement in activities that are of personal interest to them. In this sense, learning is really a by-product of passion for a subject. Yet the traditional school setup is single-mindedly focused on the imparting of disjointed information in a variety of subjects. At the physical level, this philosophy is represented by rows upon rows of identical classrooms where direct instruction is the dominant form of teaching. This system – both the hardware and software of education – is almost perfectly designed to snuff out a student’s natural curiosity and constrain learning to homogenous input and output. Perhaps a dubious benefit of this system is that in its complete failure to inspire, it motivates budding entrepreneurs to check out emotionally, and often physically, from school and invent things in their garages instead. So, how can schools support student- driven learning and create the kind of lifelong learners that society needs?

How can they be even better than the homeschool environment? The answer is to provide amenity-rich settings for learning that foster exploration, and Learning Communities that are the right size to support the emotional needs of learners. “While typical classroom-based schools are designed to produce people with a uniform knowledge and skill set, student-driven learning spaces are designed to support individuals with varied needs, interests and talents. ” Rather than double-loaded corridors with classrooms the same size, Learning Communities contain a variety of spaces and amenities, and serve 100 - 150 students. A variety of room sizes with

permeable boundaries supports learning beyond the lecture mode, enabling multiple space formations that are acoustically separate when needed. Teachers don’t “own” any of these learning spaces, but share their professional office, using it for planning and assessment. Learning Communities also typically include learning studios for large group work, a commons area, small group rooms, and creative “DaVinci studios” for hands-on work and experimentation, all with a variety of flexible furnishings. These might include soft seating for comfortable reading, tall seating with tech bars, adjustable tables with ergonomic seating for group collaboration, and whiteboards for brain- storming sessions. Students and teachers can then select the proper space and furnishing arrangement for their learning cycle as it changes throughout the day. The beauty of the Learning Community model is that it can be used by institutions of any size, from a small charter school to a large public high school, since the scale of the school is broken down so students always feel they are part of an intimate community of peers and adults.

PK Yonge Developmental Research School in Gainesville, Florida

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