Are students asked to create new knowledge that demonstrates higher order thinking?
Skilled adults in diverse occupations and participating in civic life face the challenge of applying basic skills and knowledge to complex problems they have not previously faced. To reach adequate solutions to new problems, the competent adult has to construct knowledge, because these problems cannot be solved by routine use of information or skills previously learned. Such construction of knowledge involves organizing, interpreting, evaluating, or synthesizing prior knowledge to solve unique or novel problems. Teachers often think of these operations as higher order thinking skills. We contend, however, that successful construction of knowledge is best learned through a variety of experiences that call for this kind of cognitive work, not by explicitly teaching a set of discrete thinking skills, divorced from the problems’ contexts.
Does this task ask students to demonstrate in-depth knowledge through coherent clarifications, explanations or arguments?
Constructing knowledge alone is not enough. The mere fact that someone has constructed, rather than reproduced, a solution to a problem is no guarantee that the solution is adequate or valid. Authentic adult intellectual accomplishments require that construction of knowledge be guided by disciplined inquiry.
By this we mean that they (1) use a prior knowledge base often grounded in an academic or applied discipline, (2) strive for in-depth understanding rather than superficial awareness, and (3) develop and express their ideas and findings through elaborated communication.
Do students apply knowledge to solve problems outside of school?
Finally, meaningful intellectual accomplishments have utilitarian, aesthetic, or personal value. When adults write letters, news articles, organizational memos, or technical reports; when they speak a foreign language; when they design a house, negotiate an agreement, or devise a budget; when they create a painting or a piece of music—they try to communicate ideas that have an impact on others.
In contrast, most school assignments, such as spelling quizzes, laboratory exercises, or typical final exams are designed only to document the competence of the learner; they lack meaning or significance beyond the certification of success in school.
Curricula or instruction intended to be relevant, student-centered, hands-on, or activity-based may be construed as having value beyond school. But these labels alone do not necessarily include the intellectual component in our concept of value beyond school. Intellectual challenges raised in the world beyond the classroom are often more meaningful to students than those contrived only for the purpose of instructing students in school. But the key here is to offer any activity, regardless of whether it conforms to familiar notions of relevance, student interest, or participatory learning that presents an intellectual challenge that when successfully met has meaning to students beyond complying with teachers’ requirements.
Carmichael, D. and Wahlert, C. (2015) The Coaching Companion: Transforming Teaching & Learning through Authentic Intellectual Work, 3rd Edition. Center for Authentic Intellectual Work, St. Paul, MN.