As the world evolves, our educational approach must also adapt, inspiring stewardship and understanding of global challenges. I’ve crafted curriculum outcomes that blend primary school subjects with real-world activities, fostering curiosity and a proactive mindset in young learners. 1. The study of rainforests - Let’s build a classroom mini-rainforest to explore biodiversity and promote ecosystem conservation. 2. The study of writing letters - Let’s impact future policies by writing persuasive letters to leaders about environmental or social issues. 3. The study of insects - Let’s create a habitat for beneficial insects to promote local biodiversity. 4. The study of history - What can we learn from historical events to improve community cohesion and peace? 5. The study of the food chain - Let’s adopt a local endangered species and start a campaign to protect it. 6. The study of maps - Let’s explore the impacts of climate change on different continents using interactive map projects. 7. The study of basic plants - Let’s cultivate a garden with plants from around the world, focusing on their roles in sustainable agriculture. 8. The study of local weather - Let’s build weather stations to understand climate patterns and their effects on our environment. 9. The study of simple machines - Let’s engineer solutions to improve water and energy efficiency in our community. 10. The study of counting and numbers - Let’s analyze data on recycling rates and set goals for waste reduction. 11. The study of community helpers - Let’s explore how people around the world help improve community well-being and resilience. 12. The study of basic materials - Let’s investigate how everyday materials can be recycled or reused creatively in art projects. 13. The study of stories and fables - Let’s share stories from various cultures that teach lessons about community and cooperation. 14. The study of water cycles - Let’s design experiments to clean water using natural filters, learning about sustainable living practices. 15. The study of world populations - Let’s look at population distribution and discuss how urban planning can address housing and sustainability challenges. 16. The study of ecosystems - Let’s restore a small section of a local park, linking it to the role ecosystems play in human well-being. 17. The study of cultural studies - Let’s hold a festival to celebrate global cultures and their approaches to sustainable living. 18. The study of physics - Let’s discover renewable energy sources through simple experiments. These projects encourage real-world application, teamwork, and problem-solving, emphasizing the role of education in shaping informed, proactive citizens ready to face global challenges. This approach makes learning relevant and essential for today’s interconnected world. Which one will you try? #education #school #teacher #teaching
Activities That Connect Learning to Real-World Experiences
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Summary
Activities that connect learning to real-world experiences are educational methods that bring classroom knowledge into practical, everyday situations. These strategies help students see the relevance of what they’re studying by engaging them in projects, hands-on tasks, and authentic problem-solving, preparing them for real-life challenges.
- Encourage hands-on projects: Invite students to create, build, or experiment with tasks that mirror real-life situations, such as designing solutions for community issues or simulating workplace scenarios.
- Build community partnerships: Connect classroom learning with local organizations and professionals, giving students opportunities to collaborate, volunteer, or learn directly from experts in the field.
- Promote reflection and discussion: Allow students to share their insights and experiences through group conversations, presentations, or video reflections, helping them process what they’ve learned and understand its practical impact.
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If we want teachers to design learning that's real-world, meaningful and hands-on, we need to radically re-think Professional Development for teachers. Here are 3 ideas to shake-up your PD in August before school starts: #1: For real-world connection: Partner with 3-4 non-profit groups in your community. For a 1/2 day, send your teachers out. Have them volunteer with the groups. Learn what they're about and build relationships. For the 1/2 half, teachers create a presentation for their colleagues about how the organisation could be integrated into project-design, exhibition spaces or learning experiences for kids. Outcome: knowledge of local organizations combating local issues. Contact people within these organizations. Easier real-world integration learning. BONUS: Invite guests from other local community organizations during your ongoing PD over the year to give 1 hour presentations about their mission and what they do. #2: For subject-relevance: Partner with local companies that are integrating academic learning into what they do. Send your English teachers to a publishing company or the local newspaper. Send your science teachers to the bio-tech company in the next town. Send your math teachers to visit engineers. Use 1/2 the day to visit these places, talk about the real processes they use academic learning in. For the 1/2 have of the day, teachers work in their subject groups to dive deep into how their subjects can be connected to real careers in project design. Outcome: experience for how subject learning is used in content and processes outside of school. Relationships with professionals who can be experts for kids, projects that support kids to become writers, scientists, mathematicians, engineers, etc. #3: For MAKING: Use what teachers have planned for the first project of the year and spend 1/2 of the day having your teachers MAKE the product they want their students to make. Want kids to make a film? Go out and make a film. Portrait drawing? Draw it. Use 1/2 of the day de-constructing the making process. What steps are necessary? What supports are necessary for kids? Use this experience to help understand better planning for Project-Based Learning. Outcome: More scaffolding for kids in the making process. Creating frames to give freedom and allowing for more student-driven work that is high-quality and integrating a "learning by doing" experience in PBL. BONUS: Make this a regular part of project planning. From the wise words of Jeffrey Robin: Do the project yourself, first. Basically, get teachers OUT. Move PD from academic learning and into experiential learning. We cannot expect teaching for kids to change unless we change how teachers are learning. Need help? Reach out. info@imagineif.dk 📸 : 2023: Lynghede School partnering with Kongernes Jelling where teachers became students and used the museum to create a whole-staff theater performance in one day. #pbl #projectbasedlearning
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Active Learning Strategies Active learning transforms students from passive listeners into active participants who question, apply, and connect their learning to real-world contexts. By engaging in doing, discussing, and creating, students retain knowledge more deeply, develop critical thinking and confidence, and see the relevance of what they learn. Collaboration with peers further builds empathy, teamwork, and essential lifelong skills beyond the classroom. The following strategies offer practical ways to bring these principles to life and help students actively engage with their learning. 💎 Students can have 2 minutes to prepare and gather their thoughts individually, then discuss in pairs for 10 minutes, before sharing perspectives with the class and having a class discussion. 💎 Students can have various roles to bring pro/con, or stakeholder perspectives to spark critical engagement. 💎 Students can be the “summarizer,” the “challenger,” or the “connector” (linking ideas to previous content), when it comes to group discussion. 💎 Students get a chance of extending conversations outside class by uploading their short 2-3 minute video reflection in the discussion forum. The video can include 3-5 key points or quotations from the resources that you brought to class, together with student reacting to them. 💎 Students present realistic scenarios and to solve or analyze them. 💎 Students act out decision-making situations (e.g., business negotiation, patient care, policy debate). 💎 After a mini-lecture, students get a 5-minute challenge where they can apply the concept to an example. 💎 Students create something tangible (a business plan, a design prototype, a policy brief) that has the key takeaways of the concept you taught. 💎 Students take short, low-stakes quizzes in groups where they remember and apply knowledge. 💎 Students individually or in a group teach a concept to the class and bring resources to support understanding. 💎 Each group learns one part of the content, then teaches it to others as a Jigsaw activity. 💎 Students make short videos, explainers, or infographics for presenting their findings to their peers. 💎 Students review each other’s work and provide constructive feedback, reinforcing their own understanding. What are some of the strategies that worked for your students?😊 #ActiveLearning #TeachingStrategies #StudentEngagement #DeepLearning #CriticalThinking #CollaborativeLearning #HigherEducation #InnovativeTeaching #LearningDesign #Pedagogy #EducationTransformation #LifelongLearning
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The biggest lie in education? “Kindergarteners aren’t ready for real-world responsibility.” But this group of 5-year-olds just learned to build a fire using maps, teamwork, and real leadership. Here’s how they did it (and why it matters): Kindergartners at Alpha school go through our life-skills workshop called Teamwork Titans. In this workshop, our students learn how to: • Gather fuel with intention • Read a map and navigate terrain • Communicate clearly under stress • Block the wind together (shoulder to shoulder!) • And safely build and maintain a fire to roast s’mores But more important than the fire is what’s being built inside them. Because while they’re gathing materials and lighting kindling, they’re also learning: • Leadership – Taking initiative, guiding a team, and learning that being in charge is often harder than doing the task yourself. • Situational Awareness – Reading maps, orienting themselves to north/south/east/west, and noticing what's happening around them. • Team Coordination – Giving and receiving instructions, listening to others, and staying focused when a group dynamic gets tough. • Emotional Regulation – Staying calm when the task gets stressful or peers aren’t listening. • Follow-through – Seeing a shared task through from start to finish, even when it’s difficult. • Pride & Responsibility – Feeling the weight and joy of doing something real, tangible, and meaningful. Many traditional schools try to teach “leadership” by assigning roles on a group poster project. Or they give out clipboards with titles like “line leader” and call it a day. But reading a map to locate firewood... Navigating real group conflict... Blocking the wind with your body so the flame doesn’t die... That’s not pretend. That’s real-world practice. And it’s never too early to start. Because life skills don’t start at 18. This is the future of education.
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What happens when students gain hands-on experience at the start of the degree rather than at the end? Not as an internship or a capstone, but as something built into their first year experience: early, and for credit? This spring, Podium Education ran a pilot with hundreds of first- and second-year students in their new Career Discovery Experience. Students engaged in high-impact experiences designed to help them explore career paths firsthand: ✔️ applied, skill-based experiences tied to real-world work ✔️ conversations with industry professionals, and ✔️ guided reflection within the academic experience. They rotated through a series of industries tied to core career competencies—across areas like messaging, data, innovation, and project execution—while learning how those skills show up across industries. Even mid-program, a few patterns started to emerge: 67% are identifying what kinds of work interest them (or don’t) 93% report a stronger connection between college and career One student shared: “You’ll discover something new about yourself, or gain a fresh perspective on your future plans.” It’s early, but for me, one thing is clear: This is career exploration gold.💰 Keep an eye on Podium Education—they’ll be sharing more as early career experiences continue to take shape and scale. Aled Owens Lindsey Rosenbluth Caitlyn Canterbury
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We Are Nature: Regenerative Education in Action Modern education often treats nature as something "out there" to be studied, managed, or protected. But the truth is—we are nature. When we shift this perspective, learning becomes deeply regenerative, reconnecting us to the living world. Here’s what this looks like in practice: 🌿 Learning with the Land – Instead of studying ecosystems from a textbook, students engage with local landscapes. They plant food forests, restore wetlands, and observe the rhythms of seasonal change firsthand. 🐝 Interdependence, Not Independence – Rather than focusing only on individual achievement, students participate in community-driven projects—beekeeping initiatives, seed-saving collectives, or habitat restoration efforts—learning that resilience comes from connection. 🌍 Earth as Teacher – Science and math come alive through real-world problem-solving. Water testing a local stream, tracking wildlife patterns, or designing solar ovens all reinforce that we are active participants in nature’s cycles, not outsiders. 🔥 Culture & Storytelling – Indigenous wisdom, oral traditions, and place-based storytelling help students see that their ancestors lived with the land, not against it. This fosters a sense of belonging and responsibility. When education centers on our relationship with the earth, students don’t just learn about sustainability—they live it. This is how we regenerate both our ecosystems and our ways of thinking. How do you bring the understanding that we are nature into your learning spaces? 🌎💚 #RegenerativeEducation #WeAreNature #PlaceBasedLearning
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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?
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🎓 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
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Passive Learning—Failure of Our Education Failure in dental education doesn’t always come from lack of good educators—it often stems from a lack of engagement, disconnection from meaning, and outdated teaching methods. Let me share a true story. At one of my previous institutions, I had a conversation with a respected colleague—an excellent speaker known for his captivating lectures. He took pride in the applause he often received from students and firmly believed that a great lecture from a passionate teacher was the key to student learning. I admired his style deeply, but I gently challenged his perspective. “I agree you’re a phenomenal lecturer,” I said, “but even your best lectures might not stick if students aren’t actively engaged. Passive listening doesn’t equal learning. In our generation, we didn’t have distractions like phones or laptops, so lectures worked. But today’s students live in a different world. They need more than just good lectures—they need active engagement.” We made a friendly bet. He was about to teach a class on resin-modified glass ionomer cement. I said I’d ask the first D3 student who walked into my clinic what the topic was and what it meant. If they could answer, I’d buy him coffee. Later, a student arrived. “Did you attend Dr. A’s lecture this morning?” “Yes.” “What did he teach?” “Resin-modified glass ionomer cement.” “Great! So… what is it?” She looked puzzled. She couldn’t answer. The lecture had just happened. But the concept didn’t stick. The lesson? No matter how brilliant the lecture, if students are passive recipients, information fades quickly. Our system often equates teaching with talking. But real learning comes from doing, questioning, discussing, and reflecting. Active learning methods that make a difference: • Flipped classrooms: Let students review content beforehand and spend class time applying it. • Case-based learning: Use real clinical cases to encourage critical thinking and discussion. • Hands-on workshops and simulation: Engage students with experiential tasks that mirror real-world practice. • Peer teaching and team-based learning: Let students explain, debate, and solve problems together. • Quizzes, reflections, journaling: Encourage retention and self-assessment. The future of education is active. Let’s stop measuring success by applause and start measuring it by how much our learners remember, apply, and grow. What’s your experience with passive vs. active learning? How can we make the shift? #EducationReform #ActiveLearning #DentalEducation #FlippedClassroom #LearningThatSticks #BeyondTheLecture #MindfulTeaching
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🔴 If learning stays separate from experience, it won’t stick. People don’t learn in a vacuum. They make sense of new information 👉 by connecting it to what they already know. Instead of just delivering content, help learners tie it to their own experiences. Here’s how: 1️⃣ Start with what they already know. Ask questions that activate prior knowledge: ✅ “Have you ever faced a challenge like this?” ✅ “What’s your current approach to solving this problem?” ✅ “What’s worked—or not worked—for you in the past?” This primes the brain to connect new insights to real-life situations. 2️⃣ Use reflection to deepen learning. After introducing a concept, have learners: ✅ Share how it relates to their own experiences. ✅ Compare it to what they’ve done before. ✅ Identify how they might apply it moving forward. Example: Instead of saying, "Here’s how to handle a difficult conversation," ask: "Think about a tough conversation you’ve had—what worked, and what didn’t?" 3️⃣ Encourage storytelling. When learners share personal experiences, they: ✅ Make abstract ideas concrete. ✅ Learn from each other’s perspectives. ✅ Feel more engaged and invested. 4️⃣ Design activities that require personal application. ✅ Case studies where learners apply concepts to their own work. ✅ Discussions that link new ideas to past experiences. ✅ Journaling prompts like: “How does this apply to your role?” Learning isn’t about memorizing facts. It’s about making knowledge personally meaningful. 🤔 How do you help learners connect new ideas to their own experiences? ----------------------- 👋 Hi! I'm Elizabeth! ♻️ Share this post if you found it helpful. 👆 Follow me for more tips! 🤝 Reach out if you need a high-quality learning solution designed to engage learners and drive real change. #InstructionalDesign #AdultLearning #MakeLearningStick #LearningAndDevelopment
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