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Giving Compass' Take:
• Revere High School in Massachusetts has teachers implement student-centered learning approaches in the classroom to engage with the diverse student population.
• Student-centered learning incorporates out-of-classroom experiences, dynamic learning and focuses on student voice and opinion. How will this process help keep students in school?
• Read about the opportunities and challenges with student-centered learning.
Three years ago a student who wasn’t completing his work dared his teacher, Mrs. Barile, to watch the zombie show, saying he’d study if she did. Another teacher might have balked, but Barile had helped organize a punk rock scene growing up in Philadelphia and brings that “why not try it?” ethos to her teaching. She watched the series and then built an entire curriculum around it (content rated TV-MA means the course is only open to juniors and seniors). “The show has everything — sociology, psychology, interpersonal relations, ethics,” says Barile, who is in her 24th year of teaching. “We watch the show and dissect it.”
In class, students study all the familiar concepts of high school English, but they’re applying these concepts to a work they care about passionately. Through the lessons, they also have greater control over the pace and content of their curriculum. Barile says students who take the class are more engaged and show more improvement in their writing. The juniors are more likely to sign up for AP English as seniors than students who take other classes.
Barile’s class is a prime example of how Revere High School uses “student-centered learning” to reach a highly diverse student body. Under this approach, lessons are structured around the interests and needs of students, not box-checking convenience for teachers and administrators.
Revere High’s move to student-centered learning started when Lourenco Garcia became its principal in 2010. Garcia, who held the role until this summer, was concerned that so many students seemed unable to connect with their teachers or the material. This was reflected in the school’s standardized test scores, particularly those of minority students.
Read the full article about student-centered learning by Nick Chiles at The Hechinger Report