
The Student-Centered Shift: Empowered International Schools and Classrooms Through Project-Based Learning Tired of Micromanaging Students? Try This Self-Management Framework
Tired of students constantly asking "What do I do next?" or aimlessly bouncing between tasks during work time?
In this episode, I unpack one of the most common frustrations educators face when trying to promote student agency—learners who simply don't know how to manage themselves. I share a practical tool that changed everything for our classroom: the Self-Direction Rubric. It's a simple, structured approach that helps students develop essential executive functioning skills—from time management to self-monitoring—without you needing to hover.
Learn how our Montessori middle school students went from floundering in our 90-minute "work cycle" unstructured time—getting distracted, procrastinating, and relying on us for constant direction, to tracking their growth, identifying their own learning habits, and setting meaningful goals.
You'll learn:
- Why most students aren't ready for full autonomy—and how to meet them where they are
- The 5 self-direction domains that matter more than completing a to-do list
- How rubrics help students monitor impulse control, goal setting, planning, and reflection
- A simple weekly routine that builds self-directed behaviors over time
- How this shift moves the student-teacher relationship from compliance to coaching
Whether you're running PBL, giving open project blocks, or managing a flexible classroom schedule, this tool helps you scaffold student agency without sacrificing structure.
👣 Agency doesn't happen overnight. But with the right framework, it can start today.
Get the self-direction rubrics for Free: Self-Direction Rubrics
Get the 12 Shifts Book with more ideas for self-direction: 'Where is the the Teacher: 12 Shifts for Student-Centered Environments.'
