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Real student-driven learning through SDPs

The future of school through student-driven learning

Why tell students what they should be passionate about and interested in when they can tell you? Be a coach instead of a lecturer, and watch what happens when students get to lead their learning through self-directed, real world context. Deeper learning happens when passion and purpose are driving it, and when we as adults know when to get out of the way and let students drive the process.

Overview

Information on this page is provided by the innovator and has not been evaluated by HundrED.

Web presence

2018

Established

95

Children

1

Countries
Target group
Students upper
Updated
May 2023
We hope to see education evolve, placing students at the center rather than taking a cookie-cutter, one-size-fits-all, teacher-led approach. In a time when knowledge is so easily accessible, why keep our students in the same traditional role? We hope this innovation will spark ideas for more student-driven learning and a reimagining of what education should be, and a reminder of who it is for.

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

We need to meet students where they are, encouraging them to be creators of knowledge they can transfer to real world situations. By designing their learning experience, they become problem solvers, critical thinkers, content experts, and collaborators. Through evolving to teach more of these new “basic” skills, we prepare them for the world they live in now– and one they’ll shape in the future.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

A student-directed project (SDP) model empowers students to do an in-depth exploration of a topic or theme they are passionate about through developing an essential question to drive the process. Our innovation addresses the need every student has to be curious about and explore the world around them in meaningful and relevant ways. Shifting the paradigm around the role of students is a key element to success. The work exemplifies that, from creating fire-preventing robots to founding women-owned businesses, students have demonstrated real learning happens when given the chance to explore. A variety of tools and tech (analog and digital) are utilized in each SDP. The model is not proprietary, it is easily scalable once an institution buys into the importance of this approach. Having the mindset to value opportunities that help students explore their passions and drive that exploration is invaluable.

How has it been spreading?

This innovation has been piloted at Beaver Country Day School over the last five years. In the last couple of years, we have seen an impressive increase in the number of students who applied for an SDP, as well as a great variety of projects. Applications have increased over 50%, with more than 25% of upper school students applying this year. In the future, we are hoping this trend will continue, and hope to continue to see a more diverse group of students apply.
In the next year we will begin to introduce this model in our middle school with a slightly more age-appropriate, guided approach. As an additional indication of interest in scaling, Beaver has been asked to present on the model that supports SDPs at conferences nationally and internationally.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

The main ingredient for success in adapting an SDP model is to shift the mindset regarding the role of students. Then it’s a matter of prioritizing the work to make it part of the curricular day, for credit; establish student goals and needs; then create a timeline, feedback loop, and communication plan. Please contact Kader Adjout, Director of Teaching, Learning & Innovation kadjout@bcdschool.org

Implementation steps

Presenting goals
1. Present your goals for and approach of student-driven learning and how it would work at your school.
Sharing steps
2. Share the steps for an SDP with your faculty and students (as they would work for your institution).
Application
3. Send an application form to students to present their passion project idea.
Review applications
4. A group of adults review applications and share feedback and approval with students.
Inquiry phase
5. Students start their exploration and collaborate with their coach.
Reflection and showcase
6. Students reflect on their work and have an opportunity to showcase their final product for feedback and refining.

Spread of the innovation

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