Pedagotech For English Teachers with Marcelo Hosannah
Mixed proficiency classrooms are one of the most common sources of frustration for high school English teachers — especially in exam-driven contexts. But what if the real issue isn’t the variation in your students’ levels? What if it’s the model of instruction we keep using to try to contain it? In this episode, we discuss why the “average learner” assumption breaks down, what second language acquisition research tells us about proficiency variability, and how shifting from content delivery to cognitive design changes the professional posture of the teacher entirely. No checklists. No easy fixes. Just a more honest way of thinking about a very real classroom challenge. Chapter Markers 00:00 — Introduction 01:34 — That moment at the start of the year 03:15 — The assumption buried in the question 05:16 — What actually happens in heterogeneous classrooms 06:32 — Cognitive demand vs. linguistic complexity 08:37 — Vygotsky and the zone of proximal development 09:56 — What differentiated access looks like in practice 11:43 — The danger of leveling down 13:08 — Teacher cognition: how you frame the problem changes everything 14:37 — Closing thoughts Key Ideas from This Episode Proficiency is not a linear scale — it’s the visible surface of deeper cognitive and experiential differences between learners. The cognitive demand of a task can be shared across a class even when linguistic proficiency varies widely. What changes is the scaffolding, not the intellectual challenge. Confusing linguistic complexity with cognitive demand leads to differentiation strategies that either bore advanced students or patronize beginners. Teachers who frame heterogeneity as a predictable design feature — rather than a flaw in the group — plan anticipatorily instead of reactively. About Pedagotech For English Teachers Pedagotech For English Teachers is a podcast for English language educators who want to think more carefully about how learning works — and what that means for the decisions we make in the classroom. Episodes draw on second language acquisition research, learning sciences, and teacher cognition to explore questions that matter in real teaching contexts. New episodes drop monthly. Get full access to Pedagotech For English Teachers at pedagotechenglish.substack.com/subscribe [https://pedagotechenglish.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
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