Independent Students on a Tuesday - TEC93
Episode Summary
What if the best example of student-centered learning in your building isn’t in a framework or a PD session—but right down the hall?
In this episode, Dan builds on last week’s idea that AI didn’t break education—it exposed weak assignment design—and takes it one step further.
Even when students are “thinking,” they still may not be developing independence.
The difference is decision-making.
From the band room to the shop, from athletics to art, this episode breaks down what’s actually working in schools right now—and how to bring those same structures into your classroom on a regular Tuesday, even with a test on Friday.
Key Takeaways
If a chatbot can complete your assignment, it’s not a tech problem—it’s a design problem.
Thinking is not the same as independence. Students need opportunities to make decisions, adjust, and try again.
Some of the most effective classrooms already exist in your building—band, art, shop, athletics.
Students who struggle in core classes often thrive in environments where they can do before being told, get immediate feedback, and iterate without penalty.
You don’t need a full overhaul. You need a small structural shift.
The Big Idea
Independence isn’t built through better instructions.
It’s built through better decisions.
Try This Tomorrow (The Tuesday Shift)
Start with the problem. Don’t explain it right away. Give students a task and let them try, even if it’s messy.
Then teach into their thinking. Use what they did to introduce the concept so the content has context.
End with a decision. Ask, “What would you change if you tried this again?”
Same class. Same time.
Just one added element: student decision-making.
What to Look for in Your Building
Instead of copying activities, look at how learning works.
In band, students try, adjust, and refine.
In athletics, they practice reps before the game.
In art, mistakes are part of the process.
In theater, they run it before explaining it.
In shop or CTE, the work provides immediate, honest feedback.
If every student’s work looks the same, they probably didn’t make real decisions.
The Student to Watch
Think about the student who struggles in math, ELA, or social studies. The one who gets redirected constantly and feels disengaged.
Then watch what happens when they walk into PE, art, or shop.
Same student.
Different structure.
This Week’s Challenge
Visit one teacher down the hall—art, shop, coach, or another colleague.
Ask, “Where do your students make decisions?”
Bring one idea back to your classroom and try it on your next Tuesday.
Connect
Have you tried this? Seen a shift?
Reach out and share: @CoachThomasTech
Final Thought
We’ve been chasing tools.
But the model we’re looking for has been in our schools the whole time.
If this episode connects with you, share it with a colleague and try one small shift this week.