
“Every child has their own learning style.
A learning style is the way a person best learns something new to be learned
how it processes new information.
Teach your students individually! “
Petri Lounaskorpi
Hi — and welcome! Top Teacher Theory 1 is a friendly, practical course designed to help you become a stronger pedagogical thinker. If you want to understand how individual learners build skills and competences — and turn that understanding into better lesson planning, assessment, and classroom practice — you’re in the right place.
This course is practical, evidence-informed, and built for teachers who want to move from “good” to “expert” in how they support learning.
Who this course is for
- Classroom teachers (all levels) who want clearer, research-backed strategies.
- Newer teachers wanting a solid foundation in how learners develop.
- Experienced teachers aiming to refine assessment, differentiation, and feedback.
- Instructional coaches and curriculum designers interested in competence-focused teaching.
No advanced prerequisites — bring curiosity and a willingness to experiment.
What you’ll get out of this course
By the end you’ll be able to:
- Explain how people learn and how that shapes instruction.
- Map learner development and design competence-focused curriculum.
- Use assessment for learning, effective feedback, and metacognitive strategies.
- Differentiate and personalize instruction to meet diverse learner needs.
- Apply classroom management approaches that support learning.
- Use data to inform teaching and your ongoing professional growth.
Course structure — 9 lessons
Each lesson mixes short readings, practical examples, classroom-ready templates, micro-tasks, and reflection prompts.
- Welcome to Top Teacher Theory
Quick tour of the course, goals, how to use materials, and a getting-started activity. - How People Learn
Key learning science principles you can use tomorrow (memory, practice, transfer). - Understanding Learner Development
How skills and competences grow over time and what that means for sequencing and expectations. - Assessment for Learning
Formative assessment strategies that shape instruction and help learners progress. - Designing Competence-Focused Curriculum
Planning units and lessons around competences rather than only content. - Differentiation and Personalization
Practical ways to tailor instruction so all learners can develop competence. - Feedback, Reflection and Metacognition
How to give feedback that changes performance, and how to teach learners to self-regulate. - Classroom Practice and Management
Everyday routines and structures that make deep learning possible. - Data-Informed Teaching and Professional Growth
Using assessment and classroom data to refine teaching and plan professional development.
How the course works
- Estimated time: roughly 20–30 minutes per lesson for core materials, plus extra time for assignments and reflection.
- Learning activities: short videos/reads, quick quizzes, a few practical assignments (e.g., redesign a lesson), and reflective journal prompts.
- Assessment: low-stakes quizzes and practical tasks designed to feed into your classroom practice.
- Community: discussion boards for sharing ideas, peer feedback, and troubleshooting.
Tips for getting the most out of it
- Try at least one new strategy from each lesson in your classroom — even small experiments are powerful.
- Keep a short reflection log: what you tried, what happened, and the next step.
- Share your lesson designs and student work in the discussions to get feedback.
- Revisit lessons as you implement strategies — theory deepens as you practice it.
Ready to get started? Jump into Lesson 1 and introduce yourself — tell us one teaching challenge you’d like to solve in this course. Let’s make your teaching more intentional, evidence-based, and effective.

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