Connections for the 21st Century Learner
Personal Connections
Allowing students choice in 
topics/assignments provides
greater connections with course 
concepts and gives them ownership
in their learning
Example: an assessment with
multiple options and 
differentiated tasks will allow for 
greater student engagement and
encourage a more personal, 
inquisitive approach to learning
An increase of assessment
as learning opportunities allows 
students to reflect on and 
better engage with their learning
Example: reflective journals, 
peer and self evaluations, and
reflective video diaries are just
a few ways in which students can
connect with their learning 
and reflect on the process of 
learning
Allow assignments that let
students discover more about 
themselves: the way they think,
feel, behave and learn
Example: students can study
various agents of socialization and 
analyse the impact that they have
had on their personal growth 
and development
Societal Connections
Give students the opportunity
to learn about how their community
functions and formulate ways 
to improve it
Example: students can study
various social institutions and 
critique their effectiveness (ie.
police force, government, school)
Provide students a chance
to engage with their peers in 
a variety of group-based
assessments in which each
member has a defined role
Example: presentations that 
require all group members to 
present specific information
about a topic requires synthesis
of ideas, promotes problem-
solving, allows for compromise |
and encourages inter-group
dialogue
Utilize individuals or 
organizations within the 
community that would be 
willing to collaborate with 
students to help them in making 
connections with what they 
are learning
Example: organize 'career weeks'
that allow students to meet and 
discuss with members of the 
community about what they do for 
a living and the path they took to get
there. Asking questions will allow 
students to better plan/prepare for 
their own life goals
Global Connections
Provide opportunities to learn
about 'cause and effect' to 
remind students that in a global
community, nothing happens in
isolation.
Example: field trips to organizations
that promote environmental 
sustainability teach students about 
nature's fragility and that preserving
it needs to be a global effort.
Challenge popular or
common world views that require 
students to consider multiple
perspectives thus allowing for 
greater understanding and 
acceptance.
Example: hold debates or 
round-table discussions on 
issues that may be controversial
(ie. same-sex marriage)
Give students the opportunity
to study cultural norms and customs
from different perspectives.
Example: studying about differences
and similarities between cultures
encourages interconnectedness and 
promotes tolerance
Tech Tools to Support Connections
Google Classroom allow for 
collaborative assignments, 
immediate feedback and 
interactive lesson planning
Example: students can work
on a jigsaw assignment using
a shared Google Doc and get
real-time feedback from their
teacher
Social media can enhance 
collaborative discourse, 
allow students to share 
information and lets them
learn from their peers 
both locally and internationally
Example: create a class 
Facebook page regarding a specific 
topic from the curriculum and 
invite another class (either locally 
or globally) to share resources, participate
in discussion and collaborate
The internet allows access
to unlimited information and 
teaches students to analyse, 
compare/contrast and criticize 
what they read or see
Example: students can be asked
to read multiple or opposing articles
on the same topic and discuss bias, 
perspective, historical context, and/or
the validity of the resource
