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Showing posts from January, 2026

Week 3 Blog

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(Chapter 4) Processes that Support Learning  Chapter 4 of How People Learn II , "Processes that Support Learning," highlights how attention, self-regulation, and memory influence student learning. These ideas remind me that strong curriculum design must support both how children think and how they engage. The infographic below summarizes key concepts from the chapter and connects them to creative learning and ISTE Standards.  Infographic Image: Key learning processes that influence curriculum design and support creative, student-centered learning (National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, 2018).

Week 2 Blog

Part 1: Authentic Intellectual Work/Authentic Instruction & Assessment  As I worked through this week's readings, I kept coming back to the idea that Authentic Intellectual Work (AIW) really describes the kind of learning many of us wish school could be more of. To me, AIW is about students doing work that requires them to think, make sense of ideas, and apply learning in real ways, and not just completing tasks to earn a grade. It shifts the focus from "getting through the assignment" to actually understanding and using what is being learned.  What makes Authentic Intellectual Work different from more traditional instruction is the purpose behind the work. Traditional approaches often rely on worksheets, memorization, or assessments that check whether students can recall information. AIW asks students to construct knowledge, dig deeper into ideas, and create work that has meaning beyond school. That distinction feels especially important because students can usually ...

Week 1 Blog

 Week 1 Blog Hello, everyone. Welcome to my blog.