12 Strategies To Personalize Learning: A Crowdsourced Anthology of Strategies From Real Education Professionals
12 Strategies To Personalize Learning: A Crowdsourced Anthology of Strategies From Real Education Professionals
12 Strategies To Personalize Learning: A Crowdsourced Anthology of Strategies From Real Education Professionals
Personalize Learning
A Crowdsourced Anthology of Strategies from Real Education Professionals
A Word From the Editors
There are a multitude of definitions for personalized learning. In fact, every district or school has a different definition
or vision of what personalized learning means for their students.
3. What advice would you give to someone who is just starting out with personalized learning?
To keep things consistent we asked what category their personalized learning strategy is related to (based on INACOL).
What changes in student engagement or student learning have you seen since
using personalized approaches to learning?
Student engagement exponentially increased overnight. Students were discussing more with each and in larger groups. Students
were eager to present their creations, not only with their classmates, but with their global peers. One parent continued to emphasize
how her son did not enjoy school until his time with me. Because he was not a fan of writing, he struggled in school. Because he had
the option to code his work, not only was he engaged and loved coming to work, when the choice was mine for students and they
had required writing, he participated, completed his assignment, and was eager to share. Instant buy-in!
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or what resource, activity, or tool would you
recommend for someone who wants to try personalizing learning?
If you are starting out for the first time, start small. Set out a various primary sources and let students choose the one that speaks to
them. Have them generate questions, notices, and details that speaks to them. Try choice with a partner, in a triad, and in group of
4 or 5. Each week try something new that allows choice and ALWAYS debrief as a class about the process: What worked, what could
they do individually and as a class differently next time, lingering questions about the process, and future suggestions.
Category: Flexible anytime/anywhere learning
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Think about how you can differentiate to the majority and one thing you can
control is time. This is the BIGGEST differentiating and personalizing factor, and
can easily be achieved by designing immersive learning experience that afford
students the ability to complete them anytime anywhere.
Category: Empowering through student choice
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Find a team of people willing to try things out. Have them experiment, then bring
in team members who are your biggest challenge, but who are willing to express
their concerns concisely. Work with those folks to refine your process.
Category: Tailoring content based on student need
What changes in student engagement or student learning have you seen since
using personalized approaches to learning?
My interest in using an LMS like Schoology began from noticing a change in students. When you live in a world where most
knowledge is available instantly through a Google search, much direct instruction and content-based teaching becomes
irrelevant (at least in their eyes). To reflect the world my students (and we) live in, creating personalized learning approaches in
Schoology helps break out of the old models of education and, instead, instruct students in the 21st Century.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or what resource, activity, or tool would you
recommend for someone who wants to try personalizing learning?
Start small - provide a few choices or paths of learning for one lesson. After, reflect on what worked well and, more importantly,
what enhanced the learning. Try again with another lesson with some refinements and then eventually build something bigger
for a future unit once you are comfortable with the format and process.
Category: Tailoring content based on student need
We have found that most students feel more empowered based on this approach
because it leverages the data on student performance to provide an organized
and targeted approach to intervention.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Start small - focus on three or four criteria and on the students for whom you will
experience the greatest gain.
Category: Flexible anytime/anywhere learning
Me Time
I make my courses available 24/7. My assignments are rarely due at the end of
the hour. Instead, I like to have them due at midnight the day before they will be
necessary to have done for class. This gives students the flexibility to work when
it is most advantageous for them. Some students like to work in noise, others in
quiet, etc. Chris Champion
Jason Frieling
K-12 Instructional
What changes in student engagement or student learning have you seen since Technology Coach
using personalized approaches to learning?
Romeo Community
Schools, MI
Once students realized they had choice with when and where they did their work,
more engagement was available during class. It released the stress of not having
enough time or having the right environment available to them to complete their
work.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Start slow and small. Open up one aspect of learning until you and your students
become comfortable with it. Set yourself and your students up for success.
Category: Empowering through student choice
Giving Up Control
(at least to a degree)
I allow students the opportunity to select from a small handful of projects to
demonstrate mastery of the same skills needed to be successful in my classroom.
And, sometimes I let them completely select how they will demonstrate mastery. Chris Champion
Robert Bourgeois
This creates an environment where they enjoy the lessons more and results in
Digital Arts Teacher - CTE
more buy-in to both the content of the lessons as well as the relevance to their
Durham School of the
lives and the changing society around them. On occasion, I have also used
mastery for differentiation. If a student demonstrates understanding of tools and
Arts, NC
techniques used to create the digital artwork I assign, there is no reason to hold
them back in developing further beyond the expectations of the curriculum and
the state. This empowers them to take control of their education and understand
that the ultimate responsibility for succeeding in class, as well as life in general,
rests on their shoulders more than anyone else in the classroom. Over the years, while students have often complained in the
moment, they always seem to come back and thank me in the long run.
What changes in student engagement or student learning have you seen since using personalized approaches to learning?
As I stated above, the biggest change is an appreciation for the process of learning as well as better understanding where the
responsibility for success lands. I have also witnessed a change in interest and attitude among students who find they can
make real world connections between their education and what they hope to do after graduating from high school. These
connections allow the students to put forth more effort in their success and research the careers and related skills needed to
land a job based on earlier knowledge gained in my classroom. This results from the increase in interest and understanding of
the relevance it holds for their future. Rather than being given a series of worksheets that demonstrate individual skills, they see
the interconnectedness of their knowledge and where it will take them after graduating from high school and possibly college. I
have also seen this knowledge encourage students to turn their lives around from a path that might have made their lives more
difficult in the long run. So, they are much better off for it.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or what resource, activity, or tool would you
recommend for someone who wants to try personalizing learning?
Expect there to be problems and unexpected things will pop up, but the kids will be better off for staying the course.
Category: Empowering through student choice
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Don’t think you have to change everything all at once. Take one unit and make
changes this year. See what works and what didn’t. Adapt and modify. Next year
you will be more productive when converting the next unit.
Category: Tailoring content based on student need
Students are definitely more engaged and willing to push forward when they
are getting what they need. Entering a classroom using personalized learning to
drive instruction looks very different. Students might all be working on different
projects, using different tools, and working on different topics. Using personalized
learning eliminates idle time for students because they always have something to
work on – whether it be remediation or an extension of an objective.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
I would suggest to start small. Try with just one unit or lesson. Get comfortable
with how it will work and what it will look like in your classroom, and then you
can continue to expand. Take time to think the entire lesson/unit through. What
will you do for students who need more support? How will you extend the learning
for students who grasp the objective. What pre-assessment will help guide you to
begin? How will the students demonstrate their learning? Can you offer project
choices? Not everything has to be technology based. Think about the way your
students learn. You will be amazed at how much your students learn!
Category: Using a mastery-based approach
Students understand the content better by the time of the assessment. Student
learning is slower, though when it is self-paced. Students got annoyed at first, but
by the time of the test, they were much more confident. Their engagement in the
lesson varied based on how tired they are.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
I would suggest to just go for it but start small with a 2 day lesson. Use the
completion rules in Schoology. Break the tasks up into small tasks.
Category: Tailoring content based on student need
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Start small. Maybe just start with one unit or even a lesson just to get a feel
for your changing role in the classroom. If you change too much at once, your
confusion will filter to your class.
Category: Empowering through student choice
With coordinating the group assignments with the Schoology calendar, students
don’t panic when another group submits their project - wondering if they missed
their due date.
What advice would you give to someone who’s just starting out with PL or
what resource, activity, or tool would you recommend for someone who
wants to try personalizing learning?
Have your grading rubric in place first. Then create as many groups as you need.
Conclusion
Thanks to the insights of educators from around our community, it’s clear that there are many ways
to personalize learning in the classroom, all of which can prove to be successful.
With so many strategies, platforms and methods of integrating personalized learning into your class
routine, there’s sure to be something for everyone. Take an idea or two from this eBook and try them
in your classroom, then let us know how it turns out on Twitter @Schoology.
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