I can vividly remember racing across campus to sign up for tutorials, hoping to snag a spot in the timeslot that best suited my schedule. These were the days of paper sign-up sheets pinned to faculty corridor walls, live lectures only, and the goal of cramming everything into one or two days to maximise study time in the campus library. Fast forward to today, and it’s no surprise that student attendance patterns have shifted. Technological advancements, rising living costs, and the lasting impact of the pandemic have all contributed to students spending less time on campus - often despite good intentions at the start of semester. A recent study featured in the Student Success Journal explores the experiences of first-year students and highlights a familiar trend: while many students begin with strong intentions to attend tutorials and lectures, actual participation drops significantly after just one semester. Some key insights: 1️⃣ Students are strategic: Tutorials and practicals are prioritised over lectures due to their interactive nature and stronger links to assessment. Lecture recordings have reduced the perceived need for in-person attendance. 2️⃣ Barriers persist: Long commutes, part-time work, and the rising cost of living continue to limit students' ability to be physically present on campus. 3️⃣ Social connection matters: Peer networks, friendships, and timetable design play a crucial role in supporting student engagement. Interestingly, the gap between intention and participation wasn’t unique to equity cohorts, but international students showed particularly strong alignment between their understanding of expectations and their own goals for engagement. So, what’s the opportunity here? Rather than aiming to 'return to normal,' universities have a chance to rethink what on-campus engagement looks like and why it matters. How can we better design for connection, flexibility, and purpose? How might we create spaces (both physical and virtual) where students want to show up, not just because they have to, but because it adds value? 🔗 Read the full study: https://lnkd.in/gJaNsEcE
Creating A Positive Learning Experience
Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.
-
-
Many people talk about inclusion in schools. But inclusion is not simply about placement. It is about whether a child’s “cup” is actually being filled. In a mainstream classroom, inclusion happens when the environment is intentionally designed so every child can participate, regulate, and feel safe enough to learn. So what does that look like in practice? 1. Predictable structure - Many neurodivergent students thrive when the day is predictable. Visual timetables, clear routines, and advance warning of transitions reduce cognitive load and anxiety. 2. Flexible ways to engage - Not every student learns best through listening and writing. Allowing movement, using visuals, breaking tasks into smaller steps, or offering alternative ways to show understanding can remove barriers to participation. 3. Regulation before expectation - A dysregulated brain cannot access learning. Quiet spaces, movement breaks, sensory tools, or short reset opportunities can help students return to a state where thinking is possible. 4. Strength-based teaching - Instead of focusing solely on what a student struggles with, identify what they are good at and use it as an entry point into learning. Confidence often grows from competence. 5. Psychological safety - Students need to feel safe making mistakes. When classrooms emphasise curiosity over correctness, students are more willing to attempt difficult tasks. 6. Voice and agency - Inclusion also means listening. Giving students choices, inviting their perspective, and involving them in problem-solving helps them feel valued. When these conditions exist, something powerful happens. Students are more likely to: • participate • build friendships • regulate more effectively • and develop confidence in their abilities. Inclusion is not about lowering expectations. It is about removing unnecessary barriers so every child has access to learning and belonging. When a child’s inclusion cup is full, learning follows. #Education #Inclusion #Neurodiversity #SEND #InclusiveEducation #TeachingStrategies #NeurodivergentStudents
-
The ultimate guide to creating transformational workshop experiences (Even if you're not a natural facilitator) Ever had that gut-punch moment after a workshop where you just know it didn’t land? I’ve been there. Back then, I thought great workshops were all about cramming in as much content as possible. You know what I mean: - Slides with inspirational quotes. - The theory behind the frameworks. - More activities than a summer camp schedule… Subconsciously I believed that: The more I shared, the more people would see me as an expert. The more I shared, the more valuable the workshop. And participants would surely walk away transformed. Spoiler: they didn’t. They were hit-and-miss. But then on a leadership retreat in 2016, I stumbled onto something that changed everything. Something so obvious it's almost easy to miss. But when you intentionally use them, it took my workshops from "meh" to "mind-blowing": Three simple principles: 1️⃣ Context-based Learning People don't show up as blank slates. They bring their own experiences, challenges, and goals. When I started anchoring my content in their reality, things clicked. Suddenly, what I was sharing felt relevant and useful — like I was talking with them instead of at them. 2️⃣ Experiential Learning Turns out, people don’t learn by being told. They learn by doing (duh). When I shifted to creating experiences, the room came alive. And participants actually remembered what they’d learned. Experiences like roleplays, discussions, real-world scenarios, the odd game... 3️⃣ Evocative Facilitation This one was a game-changer. The best workshops aren’t just informative — they’re emotional. The experiences we run spark thoughts and reactions. And it's our job to ask powerful questions to invite reflection. Guiding participants to their own "aha!" moments to use in the real world. (yup, workshops aren't the real world) ... When I started being intentional with these three principles, something clicked. Participants started coming up to me after sessions, saying things like: "That’s exactly what I needed." "I feel like you were speaking directly to me." "I’ve never felt so seen in a workshop before." And best of all? Those workshops led to repeat bookings, referrals, and clients who couldn’t wait to work with me again. Is this the missing piece to your expertise? - If so, design experiences around context. •Facilitate experiences that evoke reactions •Unpack reactions to land the learning ♻️ Share if you found this useful ✍️ Do you use any principles to design your workshops?
-
One of the biggest barriers to children reaching their potential in school, whether academically, socially, emotionally or even physically, is fear. The problem with fear is that we think we can predict somebody else’s fear. As adults, we can usually name what scares us. Trying a new food. Skydiving. Public humiliation. Failure. For children, some fears are obvious. Being bullied. Being publicly humiliated by a teacher. Scoring low in a test. These are visible and easier to mitigate. Yet in many schools around the world, they are still happening. But the deeper issue is this. There are countless small occurrences, or even potential occurrences, within schools that create low level anxiety. A gentle hum in the background. On its own, one small anxiety seems insignificant. But when they accumulate, we see children pretending to be sick. Crying at the school gates. Saying they hate school without really knowing why. Often they cannot articulate what is making them scared. Because it is subtle. It is the possibility of something happening, not necessarily the event itself. And if it cannot be articulated, it cannot be solved. So I began developing what I call the Safe School Framework. It asks schools to examine the underlying anxiety provoking elements within their culture. Tone of voice. Public comparison. Sarcasm. Unpredictability. Subtle shaming. The uncertainty of what will happen next. Even if these things rarely occur, the potential that they might is enough to keep a child’s nervous system on alert. And we know this from neuroscience. A dysregulated brain cannot learn. When the survival part of the brain feels threatened, higher level thinking shuts down. Children freeze. They disengage. They survive. Learning simply cannot occur in survival mode. I am not suggesting we shield children from the real world. But school should not be a place of background threat. It should be a place where mistakes are encouraged. Homework is practice, not proof. Invisible children are noticed. Sensory needs are anticipated. Praise builds confidence without comparison. Our goal is to move children into the Green Zone. Calm. Curious. Connected. Because this is where learning happens. I have identified 50 key practices that schools can implement to dramatically reduce this low level anxiety across an entire campus. They are practical, cultural and human. If we change the way our schools operate and clearly communicate to students and parents that certain things simply do not happen here, that background fear can quieten. These four slides might just be the most important four slides your school receives this year. If you would like formal training for your teachers on this framework, I would genuinely love to hear from you. gavin@upschool.co #education #school #teacher #teaching #children #montessori
-
Mamokgethi Phakeng, PhD(Wits) DSc(Bristol) DEd(Ottawa)
Mamokgethi Phakeng, PhD(Wits) DSc(Bristol) DEd(Ottawa) is an Influencer Businesswoman & Tenth Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cape Town
347,078 followersThe antidote to academic dishonesty isn’t stricter monitoring—it’s deeper engagement. After more than 30 years in education, I’ve learned that students cheat when they see no purpose in their learning. But when we bridge the gap between curriculum and real-world application, something remarkable happens: students become invested in their own growth. Key strategies that work: • Connect every lesson to tangible outcomes • Share stories of how past students used these skills • Invite industry professionals to show practical applications • Create projects that solve real community problems In this way, you will have students who are too engaged in authentic learning to consider shortcuts or cheating with AI. How are you making learning meaningful in your field? I’d love to hear your approaches. #EducationalLeadership #StudentEngagement #TeachingStrategy #ProfessionalDevelopment #EducationInnovation
-
🎓 Can we revolutionize university education by borrowing a strategy from medicine?🎓 In healthcare, teaching hospitals have long been the gold standard for preparing future doctors—immersing them in real-world scenarios under the guidance of experienced professionals. Imagine applying that same model across other disciplines. This is exactly what the Space Flight Laboratory (SFL) at the University of Toronto has done, and the results speak for themselves. Since 1998, SFL has adopted a "teaching hospital" approach to educate its graduate students in spacecraft engineering, blending formal instruction, cutting-edge research, and hands-on, real-world practice. Students don't just learn theories—they apply them in mission-critical environments, working on actual satellite projects for paying customers. The outcome? Graduates who are not only skilled but also seasoned in the complexities of their field, ready to tackle challenges with confidence and creativity. Why stop at aerospace engineering? Entrepreneurial pedagogies have similarly embraced hands-on, real-world learning, pushing students to solve complex problems with innovative thinking. Like the teaching hospital model, entrepreneurial education thrives on bridging the gap between theory and practice, ensuring students are not just academically proficient but also professionally ready. Universities often keep real-world practice at arm's length, relegating it to internships and co-op programs. But as the demands of society grow more complex, it's time to rethink this approach. Imagine what could happen if we integrated these immersive learning models into disciplines beyond medicine and engineering—fields like business, environmental science, and the humanities. We could cultivate a new generation of graduates with the critical thinking skills and practical experience necessary to make immediate, impactful contributions to their fields. It's time to challenge the status quo and advocate for wider adoption of teaching hospital and entrepreneurial models across university disciplines. The future of education and society may depend on it. #EducationInnovation #TeachingHospitalModel #ExperientialLearning #EntrepreneurshipEducation #HigherEd #FutureOfEducation #InnovationInEducation #Universities
-
Here’s a harsh truth about assessments: If your exam feels like a trap, it probably is. 😵💫 Most assessment questions aren’t measuring anything—just checking for short-term memory. Learners deserve better. We should write assessments that teach, challenge, and reveal understanding, not confuse people with trick questions or irrelevant trivia. So I made this 👇 Here are eight techniques I use (and teach others) to write better assessment questions: 𝗔𝗟𝗜𝗚𝗡𝗠𝗘𝗡𝗧 – “This maps directly to the objective.” Every question should exist because of your learning goals, not despite them. 𝗥𝗘𝗔𝗟𝗜𝗦𝗠 – “This feels like the real world.” Why are you testing it if it’s not something they’d do on the job? 𝗦𝗧𝗥𝗨𝗖𝗧𝗨𝗥𝗘 – “I’m not thrown off by format.” Clear questions = better focus on thinking, not decoding. 𝗥𝗔𝗡𝗗𝗢𝗠𝗜𝗭𝗔𝗧𝗜𝗢𝗡 – “I’m not spotting patterns.” No more “C is always right.” Mix it up. 𝗔𝗩𝗢𝗜𝗗 𝗡𝗘𝗚𝗔𝗧𝗜𝗩𝗘𝗦 – “I’m not getting tripped up.” Tricky wording ≠ higher difficulty. It just creates confusion. 𝗔𝗩𝗢𝗜𝗗 𝗔𝗟𝗟 𝗢𝗙 𝗧𝗛𝗘 𝗔𝗕𝗢𝗩𝗘 – “I can’t game the system.” They’re lazy distractors. Retire them. 𝗗𝗜𝗦𝗧𝗥𝗔𝗖𝗧𝗢𝗥 𝗤𝗨𝗔𝗟𝗜𝗧𝗬 – “There are just enough options.” More isn’t better. Smarter is better. 𝗔𝗡𝗦𝗪𝗘𝗥 𝗟𝗘𝗡𝗚𝗧𝗛𝗦 – “One answer doesn’t stand out.” Stop giving away the correct answer with extra detail. 👇 Save this for your next module. Tag a fellow learning designer who needs this. #InstructionalDesign #LearningAndDevelopment #eLearningDesign #AssessmentDesign #LXD #LearningCulture
-
Thousands of studies. Dozens of leading psychology researchers. Decades of experiments on why some people keep going when others quit… and I’ve boiled it down to the 7 biggest takeaways: 1. Action before motivation. Peter Gollwitzer’s work on implementation intentions shows that taking even the smallest step kickstarts a psychological commitment loop. Action fuels motivation more reliably than waiting to “feel ready.” 2. Make your goals specific. Locke & Latham’s Goal Setting Theory (over 1,000 studies) found that specific, challenging goals (“Run 3 times this week”) consistently lead to higher performance than vague ones (“Get fitter”). 3. Progress fuels persistence. According to the goal‐gradient hypothesis, motivation increases as we get closer to a goal. Studies in both animals and people show that small wins, like filling in progress bars or checking off steps, supercharge persistence. 4. Meaning beats willpower. Roy Baumeister found that willpower is finite, but Victor Frankl’s work on meaning and Kashdan & McKnight’s research on purpose show that a deep “why” sustains effort far beyond raw self-control. 5. Shape your environment. Wendy Wood’s research on habits shows that high self-control people don’t rely on willpower alone; they design their surroundings so the desired action is easy and temptations are out of reach. 6. Use social accountability. Harkins & Szymanski demonstrated the audience effect: people persist longer when others can see or expect their effort. More recently, Gollwitzer & Sheeran’s meta-analysis found that public commitments increase follow-through rates significantly. 7. Expect setbacks. Motivation oscillates; it’s not a flat line. Dörnyei’s process-oriented model outlines how motivation ebbs, flows, and needs recalibration. That shifting energy gives you data. And through it all, there’s one big takeaway: Stop waiting for motivation. Take action. Which one is most relevant for you?
-
🌟 TEACHING SMARTER WITH QUESTIONS: How to Use Bloom’s Taxonomy Question Wheel in Classrooms As teachers, we ask questions every day, but not all questions are created equal. The Bloom’s Taxonomy Question Wheel isn’t just a colourful poster. It’s a powerful tool to help teachers ask better questions, build higher-order thinking, and promote learner independence. Here’s how you can use this wheel meaningfully in your teaching: 1. Plan Your Questions Intentionally When designing your lesson, you can choose 2 - 3 questions from the wheel that match your objective. Early in the lesson? Use Remember or Understand prompts: “What do you know about...?” / “Can you explain why...?” During practice or discussion? Use Apply or Analyze: “What would you do in this situation?” / “What patterns can you see?” For assessment or reflection? Try, Evaluate, and Create: “What would you recommend?” / “Can you design a solution?” ✔ This helps you differentiate and ensures all students are stretched appropriately. 2. Teach Students to Use the Questions Turn the wheel into a tool for students, not just for you. Introduce one colour/level at a time and model how to ask and answer questions. Encourage students to use the prompts during group work or peer feedback. Provide mini wheels on tables so students can choose a question during discussions or project reflections. 💡 Example: In a science lesson, instead of “What did we learn today?”, ask: “Can you explain how this connects to real life?” or “What would you improve in your design?” 3. Use It for Formative Assessment The wheel pairs perfectly with Assessment for Learning strategies: Use different levels of questions to check understanding throughout the lesson. Combine with Think-Pair-Share, Exit Tickets, or Traffic Lights to deepen metacognition. Ask students to self-assess by choosing the level they feel confident in after a task. 🎯 This not only shows you where students are but teaches them to think about their own thinking. ✨ Final Thought A good question doesn’t only check for the right answers but also opens up possibilities. When students start asking each other questions from the wheel, you’ll know you’ve built a classroom that values thinking, not just answers. Image Source: Twinkl #BloomsTaxonomy #FormativeAssessment #QuestioningInClass #ScaffoldedLearning #TeacherTools #LinhLeELT #AssessmentForLearning #InstructionalStrategies
-
7 Brain-Based Facts About How Students Actually Learn ✏️✨ This is for every teacher who’s ever wondered, “Am I doing enough?” We often think better learning comes from better textbooks or stricter routines. But science says — it’s not about more, it’s about smarter. Smarter strategies. Deeper connections. And honoring the way the brain actually learns. ➡️ 1. Movement = Memory Boost Short brain breaks, stretch sessions, or even teaching while standing can boost retention by up to 30%. Tip: Try "Walk and Talk" pair activities or let students do a stretch before assessments. Why it works: Movement activates the cerebellum, which is connected to attention and memory centers. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ ➡️ 2. The Power of Stories Stories aren’t just for bedtime — they make abstract content memorable. Tip: Start your lesson with a real-life example, short anecdote, or even a “What if...” scenario. Why it works: The brain loves narrative. It lights up sensory and emotional areas, making learning stick. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ ➡️ 3. Laughter Wires the Brain for Recall Humor activates emotional memory, improves mood, and reduces stress. Tip: Use light-hearted metaphors, funny examples, or even let students make memes about topics. Why it works: Emotional arousal (like laughter) strengthens memory encoding. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ ➡️ 4. A Spark of Inspiration One powerful idea can ignite creativity and focus. Tip: Use inspiring quotes, visuals, or short video clips to introduce a new topic. Why it works: Intrinsic motivation skyrockets when curiosity and relevance are triggered. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ ➡️ 5. Mistakes Make the Brain Grow Neuroscience shows the brain fires more when making an error — not when getting things right. Tip: Praise the process, not perfection. Use “productive struggle” activities like open-ended questions. Why it works: Mistakes signal cognitive conflict, which strengthens neural connections. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ ➡️ 6. Learning is Social Students retain more when they learn through discussion, collaboration, and peer teaching. Tip: Use “Think-Pair-Share,” small group projects, or student-led review sessions. Why it works: Social interaction releases dopamine and strengthens comprehension through articulation. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ ➡️ 7. Repetition with Novelty Wins Repetition matters — but the brain craves change. Tip: Review key concepts using new formats (games, case studies, skits, debates). Why it works: Novelty keeps the brain alert while repetition builds neural strength. 🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️🔹️ “You don’t need to work harder. You need to work with the brain — not against it.” Let’s teach with compassion, curiosity, and a little neuroscience. #HowStudentsLearn #BrainBasedLearning #TeachersOfLinkedIn #NeuroEducation #GlobalTeaching #ClassroomInspiration #TeacherWellbeing #EducationInnovation #TeachWithHeart #SmarterNotHarder #EdTech #Educator #Education #Teacher #Schools
Explore categories
- Hospitality & Tourism
- Productivity
- Finance
- Soft Skills & Emotional Intelligence
- Project Management
- Technology
- Leadership
- Ecommerce
- User Experience
- Recruitment & HR
- Customer Experience
- Real Estate
- Marketing
- Sales
- Retail & Merchandising
- Science
- Supply Chain Management
- Future Of Work
- Consulting
- Writing
- Economics
- Artificial Intelligence
- Employee Experience
- Healthcare
- Workplace Trends
- Fundraising
- Networking
- Corporate Social Responsibility
- Negotiation
- Communication
- Engineering
- Career
- Business Strategy
- Change Management
- Organizational Culture
- Design
- Innovation
- Event Planning
- Training & Development