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Partner with students to energize your classroom

Student-powered classrooms

Teachers in student-powered classrooms work closely with students to help them navigate changing academic, social, and emotional needs. By increasing opportunities for educators to empathize with students and involve them in change, classrooms become healthier and more joyful learning environments where students are engaged and deeply connected to one another. Rather than increasing teachers’ workload, this approach offers a different way of working in your classroom.

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Kristen
Johnson

What is your advice for other teachers?

“I wish I could scream it from the rooftops like ‘y’all, this is worth it.’ Take the time to do this. The proof is there, and they are asking for it. If a kid is asking for it they will be so invested; if that’s where you go, you know it.”

—Ms. Perro, humanities teacher


What’s been the reaction from your school’s administration?

 “My principal is blown away, you know, because this kind of thing doesn’t happen at our school. In the past, students used to not care about assessments, and now, at the end of this year, some kids sat there for two, three hours and they passed the test. Almost 95% of my kids passed.”

—Ms. Ashby, algebra teacher


How has partnering with students impacted the classroom?

“The air feels different. You can see how students take ownership in their learning; the environment feels good. There’s a buzz in how students are working or engaging. There’s also a sense of focus and attention.”

Manny Algarin, instructional coach


As a teacher, why do you partner with students?

“Sometimes as teachers, we miss things that are very important. It’s very powerful for students to lead the charge because it’s easy to get kind of stuck in what we do and how we do. When students bring fresh eyes, perspective, and a voice, it’s only going to make education better.”  

Heather Zahr, AVID coordinator

A PERSONALIZED APPROACH


Get started

There’s no single way or single entry point to develop a student-powered classroom. You can start small, with one strategy. If you’re already immersed in Student-Powered Improvement, there are ways to expand your partnerships with students. This simple 10-question self-assessment will help identify where you are on a student-powered journey and offer a customized action plan to get started. 

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Explore student-powered classrooms

Case Study

Partnering with students to co-design a more supportive classroom

How a teacher and students co-designed a more inclusive and connected classroom using the three aspects of the continuous improvement process.
Case Study

Student-powered math classroom

How students co-designed changes in their classroom after taking a survey about classroom learning conditions.

Brought to you by Community Design Partners.

Community Design Partners offers workshops, design sprints, and comprehensive improvement projects to support Student-Powered Improvement in any context.

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Resources

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