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What do you really mean by ‘authentic’ and ‘student-centered’ and even ‘instruction’???

  • Writer: Clayton Edwards
    Clayton Edwards
  • 2 days ago
  • 3 min read

How do you know if an activity fulfills the criteria for authentic or student-centered instruction?


Start by specifying for whom and by what criteria. “Authentic” isn’t a look or a theme; it’s a social relation. An activity meets disciplinary authenticity when students engage in the practices of the field (posing and refining questions, using warrants, revising to peer critique), not just producing polished artifacts. It meets community authenticity when people affected by the problem can judge usefulness and students can revise the problem itself in response. “Student-centered” isn’t preference-satisfying; it’s authorship with accountability: students help frame the problem, choose representations and tools, and co-author criteria—while their claims remain answerable to disciplinary standards. If those conditions aren’t present, the labels are decorative (Brown, Collins, & Duguid, 1989; Newmann et al., 1996; Paris & Alim, 2017; Michaels, O’Connor, & Resnick, 2007).


What indicators reveal if an activity creates a more engaging learning environment among diverse students?


Look for who has consequential voice and whether risk-taking is safe. In a ten-minute slice: multiple student voices build the explanation before the teacher evaluates; the teacher publicly assigns competence by naming specific intellectual moves from a range of students; error is surfaced and repaired in public; talk and task ownership are distributed across linguistic, racial, and disability lines; and at least some decisions (approach, representation, or criteria) are student-made and visible. Over a unit: narrowed performance gaps without lowering demand; increased student reports of agency (“My idea changed what we did next”); reduced exclusionary referrals; and artifacts that show revision to peer/community critique (Cohen & Lotan, 2014; Cartledge, Singh, & Gibson, 2008; Abou-Rjaily & Stoddard, 2017; Larson et al., 2018).


Which of Marzano’s nine strategies for increasing rigor should an activity always incorporate?


The question presumes a universal add-on. Rigor isn’t a spice you sprinkle; it’s the coherence among goal transparency, sense-making, and public accountability. No single strategy fits all tasks or communities, and insisting on one can reduce equity (e.g., “cooperative learning” without status work can entrench hierarchies). That said, the non-negotiable cycle witnesses

1) students and teacher share public criteria and use them formatively);

2) cues/questions/advance organizers surface prior knowledge and name what’s worth noticing;

3) hypotheses (or its domain equivalent) generated and tested so claims are accountable to evidence; and

4) nonlinguistic representations to widen access to the common intellectual core.


When those are present, the remaining strategies (identifying similarities/differences; summarizing/note-taking; reinforcing effort/recognition; homework/practice; cooperative learning) are selected as needed, and implemented with status-disrupting structures (heterogeneous groups, multi-voice norms, precise assigning of competence) to avoid soft tracking (Marzano et al., 2001; Cohen & Lotan, 2014; Michaels et al., 2007).


References

Abou-Rjaily, K., & Stoddard, S. (2017). RTI for Students Presenting with Behavioral Difficulties:Culturally Responsive Guiding Questions. International Journal of Multicultural Education, 19(3), 85–102. https://doi.org/10.18251/ijme.v19i3.1227

Brown, J. S., Collins, A., & Duguid, P. (1989). Situated Cognition and the Culture of Learning. Educational Researcher, 18(1), 32-42. https://doi.org/10.3102/0013189X018001032 (Original work published 1989)

Cartledge, G., Singh, A., & Gibson, L. (2008). Practical Behavior-Management Techniques to Close the Accessibility Gap for Students Who Are Culturally and Linguistically Diverse. Preventing School Failure: Alternative Education for Children and Youth, 52(3), 29–38. https://doi.org/10.3200/PSFL.52.3.29-38

Cohen, E. G., & Lotan, R. A. (2014). Designing Groupwork (3rd ed.). Teachers College Press.

Larson, K. E., Pas, E. T., Bradshaw, C. P., Rosenberg, M. S., & Day-Vines, N. L. (2018). Examining How Proactive Management and Culturally Responsive Teaching Relate to Student Behavior: Implications for Measurement and Practice. School Psychology Review, 47(2), 153–166. https://doi.org/10.17105/SPR-2017-0070.V47-2

Marzano, R. J., Pickering, D. J., & Pollock, J. E. (2001). Classroom Instruction That Works. ASCD.

Michaels, S., O’Connor, C. & Resnick, L.B. (2008). Deliberative Discourse Idealized and Realized: Accountable Talk in the Classroom and in Civic Life. Stud Philos Educ 27, 283–297. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-007-9071-1

Newmann, F. M., Secada, W. G., & Wehlage, G. G. (1996). A Guide to Authentic Instruction and Assessment. Jossey-Bass.

Paris, D., & Alim, H. S. (2017). Culturally Sustaining Pedagogies. Teachers College Press.

 
 
 

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