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Top Teacher Theory 1: How people learn

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  1. Welcome to Top Teacher Theory
    6 Topics
  2. How People Learn
    24 Topics
  3. Differentiation and Personalization
    35 Topics
  4. Understanding Learner Development
    17 Topics
  5. Your Feedback Matters 🙏
Lesson Progress
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A warm, editorial portrait of a focused high-school student at a tidy study desk, confidently typing into a private "Learning Plan" Google Doc while a supportive mentor leans in and points to the screen. The scene highlights student agency and deliberate practice—an open paper journal logs practice times and strategies, a sticky note reads "Act on feedback," and the laptop displays clear headings plus three simple visuals (mastery-rate bar, time-on-task line, small error-pattern heatmap) and a modest feedback badge. Natural light, shallow depth of field, and realistic details convey a calm, intentional learning moment suited for an education feature about feedback-driven progress.

  • Give students a simple learning plan template:
    • Target skill
    • Current level (diagnostic)
    • Two practice activities (one review, one challenge)
    • Goal for next checkpoint
  • Use LMS journals or private Google Docs for students to log practice time and strategies.
  • Teach mini-lessons on how to use feedback (how to act on correction, not just receive it).

Avoiding common pitfalls

  • Don’t confuse practice with learning: mix retrieval, application, and explanation tasks.
  • Don’t over-rely on rewards. Research shows rewards can harm intrinsic motivation; prefer mastery feedback and small, authentic outcomes.
  • Beware of one-size-fits-all tech hype. Tools are useful when driven by clear learning goals, sound formative use, and teacher judgment.
  • Watch data overload. Focus on a few key metrics: mastery rate for target skills, time-on-task, and error patterns.

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