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In this episode, I reflect on a classroom moment where a student clearly understood a science concept verbally but struggled to express that understanding in written form. That experience pushed me to think more deeply about what learning actually looks like and how schools often rely heavily on traditional measures that may not always fully capture understanding.
I unpack the idea that learning is bigger than worksheets, written responses, and test scores alone. Students can demonstrate understanding through discussion, collaboration, creativity, projects, problem-solving, and verbal reasoning. As education continues evolving, teachers must think more carefully about how authentic learning is recognized and measured.
This connects directly to the growing changes happening in education because AI, digital tools, and evolving learning environments are forcing schools to ask deeper questions about understanding, assessment, and student growth. I discuss why process, observation, conversation, and teacher judgment still matter deeply in helping educators build a fuller picture of what students actually know and can do.
At the end of the day, I believe learning is more complex than a single score or polished final product. Students need multiple ways to demonstrate understanding, and teachers play a critical role in recognizing authentic growth. As education changes, we may need to become more flexible and thoughtful about what learning looks like now.
Show Notes
By Mr Funky Teacher Nicholas KleveIn this episode, I reflect on a classroom moment where a student clearly understood a science concept verbally but struggled to express that understanding in written form. That experience pushed me to think more deeply about what learning actually looks like and how schools often rely heavily on traditional measures that may not always fully capture understanding.
I unpack the idea that learning is bigger than worksheets, written responses, and test scores alone. Students can demonstrate understanding through discussion, collaboration, creativity, projects, problem-solving, and verbal reasoning. As education continues evolving, teachers must think more carefully about how authentic learning is recognized and measured.
This connects directly to the growing changes happening in education because AI, digital tools, and evolving learning environments are forcing schools to ask deeper questions about understanding, assessment, and student growth. I discuss why process, observation, conversation, and teacher judgment still matter deeply in helping educators build a fuller picture of what students actually know and can do.
At the end of the day, I believe learning is more complex than a single score or polished final product. Students need multiple ways to demonstrate understanding, and teachers play a critical role in recognizing authentic growth. As education changes, we may need to become more flexible and thoughtful about what learning looks like now.
Show Notes