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Top Teacher Theory 1: W

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  1. Welcome to Top Teacher Theory
    7 Topics
  2. How People Learn
    24 Topics
  3. Understanding Learner Development
    17 Topics
  4. Differentiation and Personalization
    35 Topics
  5. Assessment for Learning
    21 Topics
  6. Data-Informed Teaching and Professional Growth
    27 Topics
  7. Designing Competence-Focused Curriculum
    31 Topics
  8. Feedback, Reflection and Metacognition
    15 Topics
  9. Classroom Practice and Management
    22 Topics
  10. The Capstone - Theory into Practice
    7 Topics
Lesson 11 of 10
In Progress

How People Learn

didactec 26.08.2025

A warm, photorealistic wide shot of a modern, diverse classroom: a teacher leans in to give encouraging, specific feedback while a small group at a nearby table collaboratively builds a hands-on project with sticky notes and a laptop. Another student studies flashcards and writes in a notebook, pausing to reflect (metacognition). The background whiteboard clearly shows a simple diagram — a brain icon with arrows labeled 'experience → reflect → conceptualize → test' and short cues like 'Activate prior knowledge', 'Feedback', 'Chunking'. Candid expressions, colorful student work on the walls, realistic textures and shallow depth of field create a balanced composition with subtle negative space at the top left for a headline.

Welcome! This short, practical lesson gives you a friendly tour of the big ideas about how people learn — and, more importantly, what those ideas mean for your classroom. We’ll keep things bite-sized and actionable so you can walk away with a few concrete moves to try with real students.

Why this matters

  • Learning theory isn’t just academic: it explains why some students thrive and others don’t, why group work often beats solo work, and why prior knowledge and motivation make or break a lesson.
  • Backed by decades of classroom experience (and newer brain research), these perspectives help you design lessons that actually build skills, strengthen self‑esteem, and support transfer to real situations.
  • Knowing a few core ideas lets you be deliberate: choose the right activity, assessment, and feedback to meet learners where they are.

What you’ll get from this lesson

  • Quick, clear summaries of four major approaches to learning.
  • Practical examples and classroom implications for each approach.
  • Simple actions you can try tomorrow: a question to ask, a task to redesign, or a way to give feedback.

Lesson map (what’s coming up)

  1. Behaviorism in practice
    • Focus: reinforcement, shaping behaviour, clear routines and feedback.
    • Classroom angle: when to use modelling, practiced drills, immediate feedback and carefully structured rewards — and when rewards can backfire.
  2. Cognitive approaches
    • Focus: memory, prior knowledge, processing and metacognition (how students think about thinking).
    • Classroom angle: activate students’ prior knowledge, chunk content for deep processing, teach study strategies and metacognitive prompts.
  3. Constructivism and active learning
    • Focus: learners build new knowledge from what they already know (Piaget, Ausubel, Kolb).
    • Classroom angle: design tasks that start from students’ ideas, use experiential cycles (experience → reflect → conceptualize → test), and favour project- or problem-based work.
  4. Social and motivational factors
    • Focus: Vygotsky, group learning, self‑esteem, intrinsic vs extrinsic motivation, classroom climate.
    • Classroom angle: build safe relationships, use group reflection, support internal motivation, and design assessments as learning tools (formative feedback).

Let’s now start by listening the Podcast and then dive into the short topics — practical, classroom-focused, and ready to use.