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L3 – Learning for Life and Livelihood

Learn better and more durably when lessons are contextual, practical, competency-based and joyous.

Student-centered learning is widely taught to teachers but rarely used. L3 provides a framework and methods that enable and motivate teachers to enrich and enliven students’ learning by linking lessons to the local context and joining together to learn in many ways. L3 also engages teachers in joint reflective practice to design and deliver lessons that elevate student agency in their studies.

Overview

Information on this page is provided by the innovator and has not been evaluated by HundrED.

Web presence

2016

Established

500K

Children

2

Countries
Target group
Teachers
Updated
October 2024
Our goal is L3’s official integration into all teacher training, supervision, and support and classroom instruction by education systems worldwide. We hope for systems to equip, support, and entrust all teachers to confidently design and deliver lessons that contextualize the curriculum to foster the knowledge and skills students need for fulfilled lives and livelihoods and lifelong learning.

About the innovation

Why did you create this innovation?

Across Africa, teachers learn student-centered methods as concepts, in lectures. Even with competency-based curricula, lessons are rarely contextual or practical, and competencies are mainly academic. L3 changes this, training teachers in active learning methods as concepts and practice and fostering growth mindsets and strategies to produce evermore effective and joyous learning.

What does your innovation look like in practice?

L3 links learning to pupils’ contexts, making learning practical and fostering diverse competencies, echoing the likes of Dewey and Vygotsky. It grounds the curriculum in pupils’ daily lives, drawing on their social, economic, natural, and cultural contexts. So, rather than studying Animals in Our Community from a text as content to memorize, L3 engages students in groups to identify animals that they encounter, propose ways to categorize them, specify what they can and wish to learn, answer the questions for specific animals via observation and inquiry, then present what they learned. Teachers learn to do this via training that has them experience the methods as if they are students, design their own L3 lessons for peers to critique, practice the methods with their pupils, and work together and with supervisors to keep improving, including with digital inputs. In both countries, studies show that pupils who learn this way tend to excel as they continue their formal schooling.

How has it been spreading?

The spread of L3 has taken a few forms in the two countries. Quantitatively, L3 is the basis of Geneva Global’s Speed School program which has brought over 400,000 out-of-school children into mainstream schooling, where they disproportionately excel. Geographically, new districts embrace the model each year, and funders support its use for new populations, such as internally displaced groups. In Ethiopia, government now funds and operates over 90% of Speed School classes (over 2,400). Structurally, the two governments engage Geneva Global to help introduce L3 into both pre-service and in-service teacher training, aiming to improve learning across all primary education (and secondary education, in Ethiopia). This has included changes to training curricula and to how training occurs.

If I want to try it, what should I do?

To adopt L3, Geneva Global will be happy to discuss tailored training and support. The main steps are to: (1) condense the curriculum; (2) train trainers and district agents in the L3 pedagogic model and methods and the holistic training approach; (3) establish and operate pilot classes and train teachers; (4) build evidence; then (5) contextualize and institutionalize the model.

Implementation steps

Introduction:
In guiding systems to adopt L3, Geneva Global emphasizes that the challenge is not learning What to do but How to do it. Certainly, systems must train teachers in the specific L3 concepts and techniques – ensuring their intrinsic capacities –, but successful scaling demands systemic strategies to support and motivate teachers continuously to keep using and getting better with the L3 methods – securing extrinsic capacities.
How we do it:
Geneva Global engages its education system partners in the following steps to introduce and sustain the effective use of L3 with Ethiopian and Ugandan classes, whether accelerated or mainstream. The first four steps pertain equally to pre-service teacher training.
Step 1: Experience Student-Centered Lessons
Begin by immersing teachers in student-centered, contextual lessons to experience L3 firsthand, both as strategy and emotionally.
Step 2: Lesson Development
Guide teachers in developing their own lessons using L3 methods and emphasizing local relevance, real-world application, and competencies.
Step 3: Peer Critique
Facilitate peer critique sessions, where teachers review and provide feedback on each other's lessons to enhance quality and effectiveness.
Step 4: Implementation Planning
Help teachers plan how they will integrate L3 methods into their lessons and instruction upon returning to their classes.
Step 5: Ongoing Support
Provide continuous virtual and in-person support to help teachers address challenges and refine teaching practices.
Step 6: Education Communities of Practice (ECoP)
Encourage teachers to engage in communities of practice to share experiences, strategies, and best practices and address challenges.
Step 7: Partnership and System Integration
Accompany official education structures to ensure the articulation and operation of strategies to train new teachers in the use of L3 methods, to support all teachers in their use, and to provide inputs and create conditions for their sustained effective use. To this end, Geneva Global can offer valuable partnership through comprehensive support and guidance throughout the implementation process.

Spread of the innovation

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