200 entries
The teacher's encyclopedia.
A comprehensive guide to teaching strategies, learning theories, and pedagogical concepts.
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Accountable TalkAccountable Talk is a structured discourse framework that holds students responsible to the learning community, accurate knowledge, and rigorous thinking during classroom discussion.Action Research in EducationAction research is a systematic inquiry process where teachers investigate their own practice, collect classroom data, and use findings to improve student learning.Activating Prior KnowledgeActivating prior knowledge primes students' existing mental frameworks before new instruction, accelerating comprehension and long-term retention.Active LearningActive learning is an instructional approach that requires students to engage in meaningful cognitive activity rather than passively receiving information from a teacher.Anchor ChartsAnchor charts are co-created classroom displays that capture key concepts, processes, and vocabulary to support student thinking and reduce cognitive load during learning.Anticipation GuideAn anticipation guide is a prereading strategy that asks students to agree or disagree with statements before instruction, activating prior knowledge and surfacing misconceptions.Arts IntegrationArts integration embeds visual art, music, drama, or dance as core instructional tools,not enrichment add-ons,so students learn academic content through and with the arts.Assessment for Learning (AfL)Assessment for Learning uses ongoing evidence of student understanding to adjust teaching in real time, improving outcomes more than almost any other classroom intervention.Assistive Technology in EducationAssistive technology gives students with disabilities equitable access to learning. Learn the research, principles, and classroom applications that make AT effective.Authentic AssessmentAuthentic assessment evaluates students through real-world tasks that mirror professional and civic practice, revealing what learners can actually do with knowledge.
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Backward Design (Understanding by Design)Backward design is a curriculum framework that starts with desired learning outcomes and works backward to plan assessments and instruction, ensuring every lesson serves a clear purpose.Behavior Management StrategiesBehavior management strategies are evidence-based techniques teachers use to establish expectations, prevent disruption, and respond to student conduct in ways that support learning.Bell Ringers and Warm-Up ActivitiesBell ringers are short, structured tasks students begin the moment class starts. They reduce transition chaos, activate prior knowledge, and prime working memory for new learning.Belonging in the ClassroomBelonging in the classroom is students' sense of being accepted, valued, and included. Research links it directly to motivation, achievement, and wellbeing.Blended LearningBlended learning combines face-to-face instruction with online learning, giving students control over time, place, pace, or path through content.Bloom's TaxonomyBloom's Taxonomy is a hierarchical framework of cognitive skills that helps teachers design lessons, assessments, and questions that build toward higher-order thinking.Brain BreaksBrain breaks are short, structured pauses that restore attention and reduce cognitive fatigue, backed by neuroscience and shown to improve learning outcomes.
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CASEL FrameworkThe CASEL framework defines five core social-emotional competencies that predict academic achievement, wellbeing, and long-term life outcomes for students.Checking for UnderstandingChecking for understanding is the ongoing practice of gathering evidence of student learning during instruction,before misconceptions solidify and before moving on.Choice BoardsChoice boards give students a structured menu of learning activities to choose from, boosting engagement, ownership, and differentiation across any subject or grade level.Classroom ClimateClassroom climate is the shared perceptions, emotions, and norms that define the social and academic atmosphere students and teachers experience together.Classroom ManagementClassroom management is the set of teacher practices that create an environment where learning can happen, covering routines, relationships, space, and response to behavior.Classroom Routines and ProceduresClassroom routines are predictable sequences that reduce cognitive load, build autonomy, and free instructional time. Learn how to design and implement them effectively.Classroom Seating ArrangementsClassroom seating arrangements shape participation, collaboration, and behavior. Learn how physical layout affects learning outcomes and which configurations work best.Classroom TransitionsClassroom transitions are structured procedures for moving students between activities. Well-designed transitions save instructional time and reduce behavioral disruptions.Close ReadingClose reading is a disciplined, text-centered practice where students read short, complex passages multiple times to uncover layers of meaning through evidence and analysis.Co-Teaching ModelsCo-teaching places two certified teachers in the same classroom to share planning, instruction, and assessment responsibilities , improving outcomes for all learners.Cognitive ApprenticeshipCognitive apprenticeship makes expert thinking visible by embedding learners in authentic tasks alongside skilled practitioners, bridging classroom knowledge and real-world performance.Cognitive Load TheoryCognitive Load Theory explains how the brain manages information during learning, and why instructional design that respects working memory limits produces deeper understanding.Cold Calling in the ClassroomCold calling directs questions to students who have not volunteered. With structure and equity in mind, it increases engagement and accountability for all learners.Collaborative LearningCollaborative learning is a structured approach where students work together toward shared goals, building knowledge through dialogue, negotiation, and collective reasoning.Collective Teacher EfficacyCollective teacher efficacy is the shared belief among a school's staff that together they can positively impact student learning, Hattie's highest-effect factor at d = 1.57.Competency-Based EducationCompetency-based education advances students upon demonstrated mastery of skills, not seat time. Learn the research, principles, and classroom strategies behind CBE.Concept MappingConcept mapping is a visual knowledge-representation technique that externalizes how ideas connect, helping students build deeper understanding and teachers diagnose misconceptions.Conflict Resolution in SchoolsConflict resolution in schools teaches students to navigate disagreements constructively through structured skills, building social-emotional competence and safer learning environments.Constructivism in EducationConstructivism holds that learners build knowledge actively through experience, not passive reception. A foundational theory shaping modern pedagogy worldwide.Cooperative LearningCooperative learning structures small groups so every student contributes and depends on peers,producing stronger academic outcomes and social skills than traditional instruction.Critical Thinking in EducationCritical thinking is the disciplined process of actively analyzing, synthesizing, and evaluating information to reach well-reasoned conclusions. Here's how to teach it.Cross-Curricular TeachingCross-curricular teaching connects concepts across subject boundaries, helping students build coherent understanding rather than isolated knowledge silos.Culturally Responsive TeachingCulturally responsive teaching uses students' cultural backgrounds as assets for learning. Evidence shows it raises achievement, closes gaps, and builds belonging.Curriculum MappingCurriculum mapping is a systematic process for documenting what teachers actually teach, when they teach it, and how student learning is assessed, creating alignment across grades and subjects.
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Deliberate PracticeDeliberate practice is a structured, effortful form of training designed to improve specific performance components through focused repetition and expert feedback.Desirable DifficultiesDesirable difficulties are learning conditions that slow initial acquisition but produce stronger long-term retention and transfer than easier alternatives.Diagnostic AssessmentDiagnostic assessment reveals what students already know before instruction begins, giving teachers the evidence they need to plan lessons that actually meet learners where they are.Differentiated AssessmentDifferentiated assessment tailors how students demonstrate learning to their strengths, needs, and readiness levels , without lowering expectations for any learner.Differentiated InstructionDifferentiated instruction tailors content, process, product, and environment to students' readiness, interests, and learning profiles so every learner reaches rigorous shared goals.Digital CitizenshipDigital citizenship is the responsible, ethical, and skilled participation in digital environments. Learn the research, core principles, and classroom strategies.Direct InstructionDirect instruction is a structured, teacher-led approach to explicit teaching that consistently produces strong learning gains across subjects and grade levels.Dual Coding TheoryDual coding theory explains how combining verbal and visual information creates stronger memory traces than either channel alone, a finding with direct implications for lesson design.
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Elaboration as a Learning StrategyElaboration is a metacognitive learning strategy where students explain and connect new information to what they already know, significantly deepening retention and transfer.Emotional Intelligence in the ClassroomEmotional intelligence gives students the tools to recognize, understand, and regulate emotions, and research shows it predicts academic and life success as powerfully as IQ.Enduring UnderstandingsEnduring understandings are big ideas worth retaining long after a unit ends, the transferable insights at the heart of Understanding by Design.Enrichment ActivitiesEnrichment activities extend learning beyond the standard curriculum, deepening understanding and challenging students who have mastered core content.Equity in EducationEquity in education means giving each student what they need to succeed, not treating all students identically. Learn the research, principles, and classroom strategies.Essential QuestionsEssential questions are open, provocative inquiries that drive sustained thinking across a unit or course, revealing the enduring understandings at the heart of a discipline.Evidence-Based TeachingEvidence-based teaching means choosing instructional strategies proven effective through rigorous research, not habit, tradition, or marketing claims.Executive Function SkillsExecutive function skills are the cognitive processes that allow students to plan, focus, remember, and regulate behavior, the mental foundation for all academic learning.Exit TicketsExit tickets are brief, end-of-lesson checks that reveal what students understood, what confused them, and what the teacher needs to address next.Experiential LearningExperiential learning is a theory of education holding that knowledge is built through direct experience and structured reflection, not passive reception of information.Explicit TeachingExplicit teaching is a structured instructional approach where teachers clearly state objectives, model skills step-by-step, and guide students through practice before releasing responsibility.
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Facilitating Classroom DiscussionsClassroom discussions develop critical thinking, deepen understanding, and build academic discourse skills. Learn the research-backed principles for facilitating them effectively.Feedback in EducationFeedback in education is the information teachers give students about their performance to close the gap between current understanding and learning goals.Fishbowl DiscussionA structured discussion format where a small inner circle debates while an outer circle observes, building listening skills, accountable dialogue, and critical thinking.Flexible GroupingFlexible grouping is a classroom practice where teachers regularly reorganize students into different configurations based on learning goals, readiness, and social needs.Flipped ClassroomThe flipped classroom inverts traditional instruction: students encounter new content at home via video or readings, then spend class time on practice, discussion, and problem-solving.Flipped Mastery ModelThe Flipped Mastery Model combines flipped classroom video instruction with mastery-based progression, requiring students to demonstrate competency before advancing.Formative AssessmentFormative assessment is ongoing feedback during learning that helps teachers adjust instruction and students self-regulate, distinct from grading, focused on growth.Formative FeedbackFormative feedback is information given during the learning process that helps students understand where they are, where they need to go, and how to get there.
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Gallery Walk StrategyA gallery walk is a discussion and movement strategy where students rotate through posted materials, respond in writing or discussion, and build knowledge collaboratively.Game-Based LearningGame-based learning uses games as the primary instructional vehicle, embedding academic content in structured play to drive motivation, retention, and deep understanding.Gamification in EducationGamification applies game mechanics,points, badges, leaderboards, and challenges,to non-game learning contexts to increase student motivation and engagement.Gifted EducationGifted education encompasses specialized approaches for students who demonstrate exceptional ability, requiring curriculum and pacing beyond standard grade-level instruction.Gradual Release of ResponsibilityThe gradual release of responsibility shifts cognitive work from teacher to student through four phases: focused instruction, guided practice, collaborative work, and independent application.Graphic OrganizersGraphic organizers are visual tools that represent relationships between ideas, helping students organize thinking, reduce cognitive load, and build deeper understanding.Growth MindsetGrowth mindset is the belief that intelligence and ability develop through effort and strategy. Carol Dweck's research shows it predicts academic resilience and achievement.Growth-Oriented FeedbackGrowth-oriented feedback focuses on effort, strategy, and progress rather than fixed ability, helping students develop resilience and a deeper understanding of their own learning.
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Higher-Order Thinking SkillsHigher-order thinking skills move students beyond recall into analysis, evaluation, and creation, the cognitive work that builds lasting understanding and transfers to new problems.Hinge QuestionsHinge questions are diagnostic questions placed at lesson turning points, designed so student responses reveal specific misconceptions and tell the teacher whether to advance or reteach.Historical Thinking SkillsHistorical thinking skills are the disciplinary habits historians use to analyze the past, sourcing, corroboration, contextualization, and close reading of evidence.
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Individual Whiteboards in the ClassroomIndividual whiteboards turn every student into an active respondent, giving teachers an instant visual census of class understanding through simultaneous whole-class response.Information LiteracyInformation literacy is the ability to recognize when information is needed, then locate, evaluate, and use it effectively and ethically, a foundational skill for lifelong learning.Inquiry-Based LearningInquiry-based learning places students' questions at the center of instruction, building disciplinary knowledge through structured investigation rather than passive reception.Interactive Read-AloudInteractive read-aloud transforms shared reading into a structured thinking experience, using planned stops, teacher modeling, and student dialogue to build comprehension and vocabulary.Interdisciplinary LearningInterdisciplinary learning integrates concepts and methods from two or more disciplines to deepen understanding and solve complex problems no single subject can address alone.Interleaving PracticeInterleaving practice mixes different topics or problem types during study sessions, producing stronger long-term retention than blocked practice despite feeling harder.
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Kagan Cooperative Learning StructuresKagan Structures are 200+ research-backed cooperative learning formats that build interdependence, accountability, and engagement into the architecture of every lesson.Kolb's Experiential Learning CycleKolb's learning cycle describes how adults learn through a four-stage loop: concrete experience, reflective observation, abstract conceptualization, and active experimentation.KWL ChartA three-column graphic organizer where students record what they Know, Want to know, and Learned, activating prior knowledge and building metacognitive awareness.
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Learning ObjectivesLearning objectives are precise, measurable statements of what students will know or do by the end of a lesson. They are the foundation of intentional teaching.Learning ProgressionsLearning progressions map the sequence of knowledge and skills students develop toward mastery of a concept, giving teachers a roadmap for instruction and assessment.Learning Styles: Myth and RealityLearning styles (VARK) are widely believed but lack scientific support. Here's what the research actually says, and what works instead.Learning Targets vs. Learning ObjectivesLearning targets and learning objectives serve different masters. One guides the teacher; the other belongs to the student. Here's why the distinction matters.Lesson PlanningLesson planning is the deliberate process of designing instructional sequences that connect learning objectives, activities, and assessment into a coherent whole.
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Maker EducationMaker education is a hands-on, design-driven approach where students build, tinker, and create to develop deep understanding, problem-solving skills, and creative confidence.Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs in EducationMaslow's hierarchy explains why students can't learn when basic needs go unmet. A practical framework for understanding what every classroom must provide before instruction can succeed.Mastery LearningMastery learning holds that nearly all students can achieve high standards given sufficient time and targeted feedback. Here's the evidence behind it.Mathematical DiscourseMathematical discourse is the structured, purposeful talk students use to reason, argue, and make sense of mathematics together, a cornerstone of deep conceptual understanding.Media LiteracyMedia literacy is the ability to access, analyze, evaluate, and create media in all forms. A foundational skill for informed citizenship in the digital age.MetacognitionMetacognition is thinking about your own thinking, the capacity to monitor, evaluate, and regulate your cognitive processes to learn more effectively.Mindfulness in EducationMindfulness in education teaches students and teachers to direct attention deliberately, reducing stress and improving learning outcomes through evidence-based contemplative practices.Morning MeetingMorning Meeting is a structured daily practice that builds community, social skills, and academic readiness through greeting, sharing, activity, and morning message.Motivation in EducationMotivation in education determines whether students engage, persist, and learn. Understanding its mechanisms gives teachers practical tools to build lasting drive.Multimodal LearningMultimodal learning uses multiple sensory channels and representational modes to strengthen memory and comprehension,backed by Mayer's Cognitive Theory of Multimedia Learning.Multiple Intelligences TheoryHoward Gardner's theory proposes eight distinct intelligences beyond IQ, reshaping how educators understand student potential and design learning experiences.
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No Opt OutNo Opt Out is a classroom technique that ensures every student must engage with correct content, eliminating the escape hatch of 'I don't know.'Non-Verbal Cues in TeachingNon-verbal cues are the gestures, facial expressions, proximity, and silence teachers use to manage classrooms and communicate expectations without interrupting instruction.Norm-Referenced vs. Criterion-Referenced AssessmentNorm-referenced assessments rank students against each other; criterion-referenced assessments measure mastery of defined standards. Choosing correctly shapes what your grades actually mean.Note-Taking StrategiesNote-taking strategies are structured methods for recording and processing information during learning. Research shows format matters as much as effort.Number TalksNumber Talks are brief, structured classroom discussions where students solve mental math problems and share their reasoning strategies aloud, building number sense and mathematical communication.
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Observation as AssessmentObservation assessment is the systematic practice of watching and recording student learning in real time to guide instruction and document growth across all grade levels.Outdoor EducationOutdoor education uses natural environments as the primary learning space, building academic knowledge, physical competency, and social-emotional skills through direct experience.
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Pacing GuidesA pacing guide maps curriculum content to calendar time, helping teachers move through standards systematically while keeping instruction aligned across classrooms.PBIS (Positive Behavioral Interventions and Supports)PBIS is a school-wide framework using tiered behavioral supports, data-driven decision making, and positive reinforcement to improve student outcomes and school climate.Peer AssessmentPeer assessment is a structured practice where students evaluate each other's work using defined criteria, building critical thinking, metacognition, and feedback literacy.Peer TutoringPeer tutoring is a structured instructional strategy where students teach and support each other's learning, producing measurable gains for both the tutor and the learner.Performance AssessmentPerformance assessment evaluates students through direct demonstration of skills and knowledge, not multiple-choice tests, revealing what learners can actually do.Place-Based EducationPlace-based education uses the local community and environment as the primary context for learning, grounding curriculum in the real places students know.Portfolio AssessmentPortfolio assessment collects student work over time to evaluate growth, process, and achievement, giving teachers and learners richer evidence than any single test can provide.Positive FramingPositive framing is the practice of directing student attention toward desired behaviors rather than prohibited ones, reducing defiance and building a cooperative classroom culture.Problem-Based LearningProblem-based learning is a student-centered pedagogy where learners tackle complex, real-world problems before receiving direct instruction, building knowledge through investigation.Problem-Solving SkillsProblem-solving skills are the cognitive processes that enable learners to identify, analyze, and resolve novel challenges,and they can be explicitly taught.Productive FailureProductive failure is a learning design where students attempt problems before instruction, generating errors that prime deeper understanding of the teaching that follows.Productive StruggleProductive struggle is the deliberate practice of letting students wrestle with challenging problems long enough to build deep understanding and mathematical reasoning.Professional Learning Communities (PLCs)Professional Learning Communities are collaborative teacher teams that use shared inquiry, data analysis, and collective accountability to improve student outcomes.Project-Based Learning (PBL)Project-Based Learning is a structured teaching method where students investigate complex, real-world questions and produce authentic work for a real audience.
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Real-World Connections in LearningReal-world connections in learning anchor academic content to authentic contexts, improving comprehension, motivation, and long-term transfer of knowledge.Reciprocal TeachingReciprocal teaching is a structured dialogue strategy where students take turns leading discussions using four comprehension strategies: predicting, questioning, clarifying, and summarizing.Reflection in LearningReflection in learning is the deliberate cognitive process of examining experience to construct meaning. Research shows it deepens understanding and builds self-regulated learners.Reflective Practice for TeachersReflective practice is the disciplined habit of examining your own teaching to improve it, grounded in Dewey and Schön, and supported by decades of research.Relationship Skills (SEL Competency)Relationship skills are the CASEL SEL competency covering communication, cooperation, conflict resolution, and the ability to build healthy, productive connections with others.Research Skills for StudentsResearch skills equip students to find, evaluate, and synthesize information independently. Learn the core competencies, classroom strategies, and evidence behind teaching research effectively.Response to Intervention (RTI)Response to Intervention is a multi-tier framework that uses ongoing assessment data to match instructional support to student need, catching learning difficulties before they become entrenched.Responsible Decision-Making (SEL Competency)Responsible decision-making is the CASEL competency that teaches students to evaluate options, consider consequences, and act ethically, a skill with measurable academic and life outcomes.Responsive Classroom ApproachThe Responsive Classroom approach integrates social-emotional learning with academic instruction through daily practices that build community, safety, and intrinsic motivation.Restorative CirclesRestorative circles are structured dialogue processes that build community, repair harm, and address conflict through shared speaking and deep listening.Restorative Justice in SchoolsRestorative justice in schools replaces punitive discipline with structured dialogue, accountability, and community repair, reducing suspensions while building trust.Retrieval PracticeRetrieval practice is the act of recalling information from memory to strengthen long-term retention, one of the most robustly supported learning strategies in cognitive psychology.Rubrics in EducationRubrics are structured scoring guides that define performance expectations across multiple criteria and levels, making grading transparent and feedback actionable.
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Scaffolding in EducationScaffolding provides temporary, structured support that helps students complete tasks beyond their current ability, then fades as competence grows.Schema TheorySchema theory explains how the brain organizes knowledge into mental frameworks. Understanding schemas helps teachers activate prior knowledge and build lasting comprehension.Scientific Inquiry in the ClassroomScientific inquiry transforms students into active investigators who ask questions, collect evidence, and construct explanations, the same process scientists use.Scope and SequenceScope and sequence is the curriculum framework that defines what students learn and in what order, the backbone of coherent, progressively complex instruction across grade levels.Self-AssessmentSelf-assessment is the practice of students evaluating their own learning against explicit criteria, building the metacognitive skills that drive lasting academic growth.Self-Awareness (SEL Competency)Self-awareness is the foundational SEL competency: the ability to understand one's emotions, values, and how they shape behavior. Learn the research and classroom practice.Self-Determination TheorySelf-Determination Theory explains human motivation through three universal needs: autonomy, competence, and relatedness. When schools meet these needs, students engage deeply and learn.Self-Regulated LearningSelf-regulated learning is the process by which students take ownership of their own learning through goal-setting, strategy use, and self-reflection.Self-Regulation in LearningSelf-regulation in learning is the capacity to direct one's own cognition, behavior, and motivation toward academic goals, a skill more predictive of achievement than IQ.Sentence Starters and FramesSentence starters and frames give students the linguistic scaffolding to articulate complex ideas, participate in academic discourse, and develop discipline-specific language.Service LearningService learning integrates meaningful community service with academic instruction and reflection, developing civic responsibility while deepening subject-matter knowledge.Situated LearningSituated learning holds that knowledge is inseparable from the context in which it is used. Learning happens best when embedded in authentic activity, culture, and community.Social and Emotional Learning (SEL)Social and emotional learning teaches students to understand emotions, build relationships, and make responsible decisions, skills that predict academic success and lifelong wellbeing.Social Awareness (SEL Competency)Social awareness is the SEL competency for understanding others' perspectives, recognizing social norms, and empathizing across diverse backgrounds, a foundation for ethical, connected classrooms.Social Learning Theory (Bandura)Albert Bandura's social learning theory holds that people learn by observing others, not just through direct experience, reshaping how educators think about modeling and peer influence.Socratic QuestioningSocratic questioning is a disciplined technique of probing inquiry that challenges assumptions, exposes reasoning gaps, and deepens conceptual understanding through structured dialogue.Spaced Practice (Distributed Practice)Spaced practice distributes study sessions over time rather than concentrating them before a deadline, one of the most robust memory-enhancement techniques in cognitive science.Spiral CurriculumA curriculum design approach where core concepts are taught repeatedly across grade levels, each time with greater depth and complexity, building on prior knowledge.Standards-Based GradingStandards-based grading evaluates students against specific learning targets rather than averaging scores, giving teachers and students clearer, more actionable feedback.Station Rotation ModelThe station rotation model cycles students through learning stations on a fixed schedule, blending teacher-led, peer, and digital instruction in a single class period.STEM EducationSTEM education integrates science, technology, engineering, and mathematics into a unified, problem-driven curriculum grounded in real-world application and inquiry.Stretch ItStretch It is a questioning technique that pushes students beyond a correct answer, using targeted follow-up prompts to build reasoning, analysis, and deeper understanding.Structured Academic Controversy (SAC)Structured Academic Controversy is a cooperative learning protocol where student pairs argue opposing positions on a complex issue, then work toward consensus through structured dialogue.Student AutonomyStudent autonomy is the degree to which learners direct their own learning, choosing goals, methods, and pace, grounded in self-determination theory and decades of motivation research.Student ConferencesStudent conferences are structured one-on-one conversations between teacher and student that surface learning, set goals, and build the reflective habits that drive academic growth.Student EngagementStudent engagement is the degree to which students invest cognitive, emotional, and behavioral effort in their learning. Evidence shows it predicts achievement, persistence, and wellbeing.Student Goal SettingStudent goal setting teaches learners to define, pursue, and reflect on personal academic targets, a practice linked to higher achievement and stronger self-regulation.Student Voice and ChoiceStudent voice and choice gives learners agency over what, how, and why they learn, increasing engagement, motivation, and ownership of academic outcomes.Student WellbeingStudent wellbeing encompasses the physical, emotional, social, and cognitive dimensions of health that enable children to thrive in school and life.Student-Centered LearningStudent-centered learning shifts instructional authority from teacher to learner, using evidence-based structures that build agency, deepen understanding, and sustain motivation.Success CriteriaSuccess criteria describe what students must do, produce, or demonstrate to show they have met a learning objective. They make quality visible before work begins.Summative AssessmentSummative assessment measures what students have learned at the end of a unit, course, or learning period, and when designed well, it drives deeper thinking than any test.Supporting Multilingual LearnersMultilingual learners bring rich linguistic assets to the classroom. Evidence-based strategies help teachers build on those assets to accelerate academic language and content mastery.
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Teacher ClarityTeacher clarity makes learning intentions, task expectations, and explanations unambiguous to students. It is one of the strongest predictors of student achievement.Teaching EmpathyTeaching empathy is the deliberate practice of helping students recognize, share, and respond to others' emotions, a skill with strong links to academic success and social cohesion.Teaching StrategiesTeaching strategies are the deliberate instructional techniques teachers use to help students learn. Learn which approaches are most effective and why.The Hidden CurriculumThe hidden curriculum refers to the unwritten norms, values, and expectations students absorb through schooling, shaping identity, compliance, and opportunity in ways no lesson plan acknowledges.The Homework DebateDoes homework improve learning? The evidence is more divided than most schools admit. Here's what decades of research actually say about homework's effects.The Socratic MethodThe Socratic Method uses disciplined questioning to expose assumptions, build reasoning, and develop genuine understanding,rather than transmitting information directly.Think-Aloud StrategyThe think-aloud strategy makes invisible cognitive processes visible by having teachers or students verbalize their thinking in real time during reading and problem-solving.Thinking Routines (Project Zero)Thinking routines are simple, repeatable frameworks developed by Harvard's Project Zero that make student thinking visible and build lasting habits of mind.Tiered InstructionTiered instruction is a structured approach to differentiation where teachers design multiple versions of a task at varying complexity levels to meet students where they are.Token Economy in the ClassroomA token economy uses symbolic rewards to reinforce desired behaviors. Learn the research, setup steps, and how to avoid common pitfalls in K-12 classrooms.Transfer of LearningTransfer of learning is the ability to apply knowledge or skills learned in one context to a new situation, the ultimate goal of education.TranslanguagingTranslanguaging is a pedagogical approach that treats multilingual learners' full linguistic repertoire as a resource, not a barrier, to deeper understanding.Trauma-Informed TeachingTrauma-informed teaching reframes behavior through the lens of adversity, creating classrooms where safety and trust come before academic demands.Turn and TalkTurn and Talk is a structured discussion technique where students briefly discuss a prompt with a partner, building comprehension and verbal reasoning in real time.
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Venn Diagrams in TeachingVenn diagrams help students visualize relationships between concepts through overlapping circles, building comparative thinking and deepening conceptual understanding.Vertical Alignment in CurriculumVertical alignment ensures curriculum content builds systematically across grade levels, so each year's learning prepares students for the next. Here's the evidence behind it.Visible Learning (Hattie)John Hattie's synthesis of 800+ meta-analyses identifying the influences that most strongly accelerate student achievement, and the teaching practices that make learning visible.Visual Learning StrategiesVisual learning strategies use images, diagrams, spatial organization, and color to make abstract information concrete and memorable. Evidence-backed techniques for every classroom.
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Wait Time in QuestioningWait time is the deliberate pause a teacher holds after posing a question or after a student responds. Research shows 3 seconds changes everything.Whole Child EducationWhole child education addresses students' physical, cognitive, social, emotional, and civic development, not just academic achievement. A research-backed framework for sustainable learning.Word WallsWord walls are organized classroom displays of key vocabulary that serve as permanent reference tools, supporting word recognition, spelling, and content comprehension across all grade levels.Working Memory and LearningWorking memory is the brain's mental workspace, the limited-capacity system that holds and manipulates information in the moment of learning. Understanding it changes how you teach.Writing Workshop ModelThe Writing Workshop Model is a structured instructional framework where students write daily, receive targeted mini-lessons, and develop as authors through conferencing and peer feedback.
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Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD)Vygotsky's Zone of Proximal Development defines the gap between what a learner can do alone and what they can achieve with skilled guidance, the sweet spot where real learning happens.Zones of RegulationThe Zones of Regulation is a curriculum framework that teaches students to identify emotional states and develop self-regulation strategies using four color-coded zones.