📝 Introductory Note to
the Reader I have always been curious as to how my
planning can have a long-lasting learning effect on my students. As stated in
the olden tune by The Beatles, “Yes, tomorrow may rain, so I’ll follow the
sun,” I follow my way of planning to feel satisfied with my students’
performance while in class and when working on their summative evaluations. I do not believe there is one fixed way
of planning but rather a process that each teacher must experience before
finding the most suitable steps to follow when designing lessons. And, as the
song by Fleetwood Mac reminds us, sometimes you simply have to “go your own
way.” This manifesto captures the way I go mine. |
My Lesson-Design Manifesto
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Abstract This
paper presents a reflective manifesto on lesson design rooted in
outcome-oriented planning, constructive alignment, learner-centered
approaches, scaffolding through the Gradual Release of Responsibility model,
reflective praxis, dialogic feedback, and iterative evaluation. Drawing on
Schön’s (1983) concept of the reflective practitioner and Biggs and Tang’s
(2011) constructive alignment, among others, the manifesto outlines how
intentional planning enhances student engagement and promotes long-term language
acquisition. The framework offered provides both philosophy and praxis,
enabling teachers to compare and refine their own plans to achieve meaningful
learning outcomes. |
Keywords: Lesson Design, Reflective
Practice, Constructive Alignment, Scaffolding, Learner-Centeredness,
evaluation, Language teaching |
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Resumen Este
artículo presenta un manifiesto reflexivo sobre el diseño de lecciones
fundamentado en la planificación orientada a resultados, la alineación
constructiva, los enfoques centrados en el estudiante, el andamiaje mediante
el modelo de Liberación Gradual de Responsabilidad, la praxis reflexiva, la
retroalimentación dialógica y la evaluación iterativa. Inspirado en el
concepto del “profesional reflexivo” de Schön (1983) y la “alineación
constructiva” de Biggs y Tang (2011), el manifiesto describe cómo la planificación
intencional puede mejorar la participación de los estudiantes y favorecer la
adquisición duradera de la lengua. El marco propuesto combina filosofía y
praxis, permitiendo a los docentes comparar y perfeccionar sus planes de
clase para lograr resultados de aprendizaje significativos. |
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Resumo Este
artigo apresenta um manifesto reflexivo sobre o design de aulas baseado no
planejamento orientado para resultados, no alinhamento construtivo, nas
abordagens centradas no aluno, na aprendizagem apoiada pelo modelo de
Liberação Gradual da Responsabilidade, na práxis reflexiva, no feedback
dialógico e na avaliação iterativa. Inspirado no conceito de Schön (1983) do
“profissional reflexivo” e no modelo de “alinhamento construtivo” de Biggs e
Tang (2011), o manifesto mostra como o planejamento intencional pode aumentar
o engajamento dos estudantes e favorecer a aquisição duradoura da língua. O
quadro proposto integra filosofia e prática, permitindo que professores
comparem e aprimorem seus planos de aula para alcançar resultados
significativos de aprendizagem. |
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Introduction
Lesson
planning is not a mechanical act but a deliberate, reflective, and academic
endeavor. It requires educators to carefully consider outcomes, learners,
methods, and reflection cycles. As Schön (1983) emphasized, the teacher is a
“reflective practitioner” who must continuously think in action and on
action to refine instructional practices. This manifesto outlines my philosophy
of lesson design: a commitment to outcome-oriented, learner-centered,
constructively aligned, scaffolded, and reflective teaching that is
consistently evaluated and improved when adversity gives me the chance to
reconsider what I planned after a class has been taught.
Outcome-Oriented
Planning
Effective
lessons begin with clear and measurable learning outcomes (LOs). Anderson
(2021) stresses that “stating the learning outcome, designing learning
opportunities to achieve it, and including formative assessments to evidence
achievement” form the triad of purposeful planning (p. 3). I have adopted this
principle by articulating specific outcomes before selecting content from
thematic units I have to cover or methods to approach content. For example, if
the goal is for learners to engage in workplace English communication, every
activity and assessment is aligned with that communicative aim. Without this
clarity, lessons risk becoming a sequence of disjointed activities rather than
a coherent path toward mastery of grammar points and lexical units.
Constructive
Alignment
Building
on this, I embrace Biggs and Tang’s (2011) concept of constructive alignment,
which insists that “students construct meaning through relevant learning
activities, and the teacher’s job is to align the planned teaching/learning
activities with the intended learning outcomes” (p. 97). In my planning, I
ensure that the design of activities, whether role-play, discussion, or reading
tasks, corresponds directly to the stated objectives. This alignment guarantees
that learners are not merely exposed to content but actively building knowledge
toward outcomes. This alignment guarantees that learners assimilate new
grammatical structures and vocabulary along with the communication context
where learners can apply this content.
Learner-Centeredness
The
foundation of my planning lies in a learner-centered approach. According
to Spector (2023), “learner-centered approaches engage students more deeply,
motivating them to regulate their own learning and enhancing long-term
retention” (p. 4). I design lessons that invite learners to think critically,
collaborate, and connect content to their lived experiences or in preparation
for experiences they are bound to have in their future. IntechOpen (2021) also
underscores that “shifting the focus from teaching to learning demands a
reorientation of the classroom dynamic” (p. 2). This means I prioritize
activities where students are not passive recipients but co-constructors of
meaning and where they actively find themselves using the target language in
everyday life contexts.
Scaffolding
Through Gradual Release of Responsibility
Equally
central to my philosophy is the Gradual Release of Responsibility (GRR)
model. Pearson and Gallagher (1983) explain that “responsibility for task
completion shifts gradually from teacher to student” (p. 337). This scaffolding
structure “I do, we do, you do” allows learners to build independence
progressively. In practice, I begin by modeling language use usually with one
of the students in class, then guiding my learners into structured practice,
and finally stepping back as they take ownership of communicative tasks and
produce based on what has been studies. This ensures that students feel
supported while gaining autonomy and that they can sense that they can use the
language meaningfully.
Reflection
as Praxis
My
planning also rests on a continuous cycle of reflection. Schön (1983)
highlights that professionals must engage in “reflection-in-action,” the
ability to adjust in real time, and “reflection-on-action,” the retrospective
analysis of practice (p. 68). I try to always integrate both modes. Immediately
after lessons, I record observations about student engagement, pacing, and task
effectiveness. Later, I revisit these notes to reframe lessons in light of
broader pedagogical insights. Fletcher and Zwart (2021) describe this
anticipatory process as “reflection-for-action, where teachers envision how
their decisions will influence future learning trajectories” (p. 164). In this
way, reflection is not peripheral but central to planning helping me to cater
for learners’ communication needs.
Dialogic
Feedback and Professional Growth
Lesson
planning is not solitary. Wang and Zheng (2024) emphasize that “teachers’
professional growth is strengthened when reflective practice is dialogic,
involving mentors or colleagues in the evaluation of teaching” (p. 53). For me,
sharing plans and reflections with peers allows blind spots to be revealed and
teaching assumptions to be challenged. In doing so, lesson design becomes a
collaborative act of professional inquiry, deepening pedagogical content
knowledge.
Evaluation
and Iteration
Finally,
I see planning as part of an iterative cycle of evaluation. Winn (2023)
reminds us that “evaluation is inseparable from design; it provides the
evidence to refine and adjust both content and process” (p. 2). By gathering
evidence from formative assessments, student feedback, and personal reflection,
I adapt lessons for future iterations. This iterative loop transforms lesson
design into a form of practitioner research, where every class informs the next
based on student performance and spotted needs too pedagogical reinforcement of
communication tasks to boost mastery of the target language..
Conclusion
This
manifesto of mine is both philosophy and praxis embroidered into my teaching
practice. It is grounded in theory, validated by scholarship, and lived through
classroom application. By committing to outcome-oriented design (Anderson,
2021), constructive alignment (Biggs & Tang, 2011), learner-centered
practices (Spector, 2023; IntechOpen, 2021), scaffolding through GRR (Pearson
& Gallagher, 1983), reflection as praxis (Schön, 1983; Fletcher &
Zwart, 2021), dialogic feedback (Wang & Zheng, 2024), and iterative
evaluation (Winn, 2023), I uphold a planning ethos that is intentional,
reflective, learner-focused, and ever-evolving.
In essence, my lesson design is:
- Outcome-oriented—with
well-articulated goals.
- Reflectively
anchored—anticipating and then evaluating with
care.
- Learner-centered
and constructively aligned—where every activity
supports deep learning.
- Scaffolded
via GRR—so learners gradually assume ownership.
- Collaboratively
refined—through peer dialogue and
evidence-informed reflection.
References
Anderson, L. W. (2021). Principles for lesson planning.
ResearchGate. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/373241022_Principles_for_Lesson_Planning
Biggs, J., & Tang, C. (2011). Teaching for quality
learning at university (4th ed.). McGraw-Hill Education.
Cornell University. (2023). Learner-centered teaching
and active learning strategies. eCommons. https://ecommons.cornell.edu/items/b13fb424-9490-4c9f-8a94-66dc1a21f783
Fletcher, T., & Zwart, R. C. (2021). Reflection for
action: The importance of reflection in teacher education. Mathematics
Education Research Journal, 33(2), 159–176.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s13394-017-0211-9
IntechOpen. (2021). Learner-centered teaching: A
practical guide to engaging students. IntechOpen Journal. https://www.intechopen.com/journals/1/articles/180
Kember, D., & McNaught, C. (2007). Constructive
alignment. In R. Nata (Ed.), Progress in education (Vol. 18, pp.
1–23). Nova Science Publishers.
Ovens, A., & Fletcher, T. (2022). Reflective practice
in teaching: Schön revisited. The Journal of Aesthetic Education, 56(2),
31–50. https://doi.org/10.1177/10567879221094298
Pearson, P. D., & Gallagher, M. C. (1983). The
instruction of reading comprehension. Contemporary Educational Psychology, 8(3),
317–344. https://doi.org/10.1016/0361-476X(83)90019-X
Schön, D. A. (1983). The reflective practitioner: How
professionals think in action. Basic Books.
Spector, J. M. (2023). Active learning, engagement, and
self-regulation. Cogent Education, 10(1), 2202123.
https://doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2023.2202123
Wang, Q., & Zheng, Y. (2024). Teacher reflection and
professional growth in practice. Journal of Teacher Education and
Sustainability, 26(1), 45–62. https://doi.org/10.1186/s43031-024-00114-8
Winn, W. (2023). Evaluation and reflection in instructional
design. Teaching and Teacher Education, 124, 104012.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tate.2023.104012
My Lesson-Design Planning Framework
(Focused Template)
A structured template you might employ when planning
lessons:
A. Before Planning
- Define
Clear Learning Outcomes (LOs): Begin by articulating
specific, measurable objectives—what students should know or be able to
do. This aligns with Anderson’s triad: stating the LO, designing learning
opportunities to achieve it, and including formative assessments to
evidence achievement.
- Engage
in Reflection-for-Action: Anticipate student
responses and potential pitfalls informed by previous experiences—this
prepares you to refine examples and anticipate learning trajectories.
B. During Planning
- Apply
Constructive Alignment: Ensure every activity
and assessment is deliberately aligned to support the LOs. As Biggs and
Tang emphasize, learners construct meaning through activities, and
teaching must align them explicitly with outcomes.
- Emphasize
Learner-Centered Design: Situate planning around
student needs, interests, and contexts—this leads to higher engagement and
deeper learning.
- Adopt
Gradual Release of Responsibility (GRR): Sequence
instruction—from teacher modeling to guided practice, gradually
transferring ownership to learners—to scaffold independent competence.
- Choose
Exemplary Examples Mindfully: Reflection‐for‐action informs the
selection/design of examples that clarify concepts and connect with
learners effectively.
- Implement
Learner-Centered Active Strategies: Integrate active,
reflective tasks that foster deeper engagement and self-regulation.
C. After Planning (Reflection & Evaluation)
- Immediate
and Delayed Reflection: Reflect promptly
(reflection‐in‐action) and again later
(reflection‐on‐action) to deepen
insight; both modes enhance accuracy of self-assessment and emotional
clarity.
- Facilitate Dialog and Feedback: Share reflections with peers or mentors and use feedback to refine pedagogical content knowledge and adaptivity.
- Evaluate Learning and Practice: Use evidence from observations, student performance, and your own teaching to assess what worked—or didn’t—and inform future iterations.
Lesson Planning Checklist Based on Prof. Jonathan Acuña’s Planning Manifesto
Lesson Planning Checklist Based on Prof. Jonathan Acuña’s Planning Manifesto by Jonathan Acuña
My Lesson-Design Manifesto by Jonathan Acuña