Education Endowment Foundation:EEF blog: Voices from the classroom: Applying the seven-step model to support independent learning

EEF blog: Voices from the classroom: Applying the seven-step model to support independent learning

Author
Hannah Heron
Hannah Heron
Content Specialist for Learning Behaviours

In this â€‹â€˜Voices from the Classroom’ video, Julie Kettlewell – Psychology Teacher and Assistant Director at Huntingdon Research School – explains how she uses the ​‘seven-step model’ to support pupils’ independent learning.

Blog •1 minute •
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Drawing from Recommendation 2 of the EEF’s ​‘Metacognition and Self-Regulation’ guidance report, this video highlights how the ​‘seven-step model’ for explicitly teaching metacognitive strategies allows teachers to build solid knowledge and understanding before gradually releasing responsibility to their learners.

The ​‘seven-step model’ can be applied to different subject content at all phases and ages.

We asked Julie to talk to us about how she applies the ​‘seven-step model’ to her A‑level planning and teaching. Julie highlights how the model allows us to explicitly focus our teaching on developing independence.

In the video, Julie focusses on what the ​‘Modelling’ and ​‘Guided Practice’ elements look like in her classroom.

We hope this latest ​‘Voices from the Classroom’ supports colleagues to consider how integrating the ​‘seven-step model’ into our teaching habits can help our pupils become more independent.

Applying the seven-step model to support