Monday, 3 November 2025

Defining Learning at Westminster Academy

As we reflect on our Teaching and Learning practice at Westminster Academy, it is vital that we have a clear, shared definition of what we mean by learning, and that this definition aligns with our school’s unique context and values. At our Academy, we define learning as follows:

Learning is the process by which students actively acquire, consolidate and apply knowledge, skills and behaviours; it involves sustained thinking, purposeful challenge, meaningful feedback and growing independence, leading to the transformative development of the learner as a confident, responsible and curious citizen of the world.

Let’s unpack this definition:

  1. Active acquisition – Learning is not passive. Students must engage: ask questions, probe ideas, try out tasks, make mistakes and refine their understanding.

  2. Consolidation – It isn’t enough simply to present information: learners need time and rich opportunities to embed, rehearse and revisit knowledge so that it becomes fluent and accessible.

  3. Application – Real learning means being able to use what you know and can do in different contexts: solving new problems, reasoning, transferring to unfamiliar situations.

  4. Sustained thinking & purposeful challenge – Learning happens when the work demands cognitive effort: tasks need depth, complexity and the right level of stretch, neither so easy that students coast, nor so hard that they disengage.

  5. Meaningful feedback – Feedback (from teacher, peers, self) is integral: but not just telling the answer. It’s guiding the next step, helping build awareness of what to do and how to improve.

  6. Growing independence – Over time learners become more able to manage their own learning: set goals, monitor progress, select strategies, reflect and self‑regulate.

  7. Transformative development – The outcome is more than retention of facts: students change. They become more confident, responsible, curious, self‑motivated and prepared for lifelong learning and global citizenship.

This is our definition – one that reflects the demands of our context and aligns with the ambition we hold for every student here at Westminster Academy.

How do the WA Pillars support this definition of learning?

Our definition above does not sit in isolation: it is underpinned and given shape by our WA Pillars for Teaching & Learning. These Pillars provide the structure, language and shared expectations that enable our vision for learning to become reality in classrooms across the school. Below I map how each key element of our definition is supported by the pillars.

  • Active acquisition & purposeful challenge
    Climate and Character’ and ‘Success for All’ emphasises challenge and high expectations – ensuring that tasks require deep thinking, that students are encouraged to stretch beyond current comfort zones, and that we avoid simply defaulting to recall tasks. This connects directly to the “active acquisition” and “sustained thinking” elements of learning.

  • Consolidation and application
    The Quality of Instruction’ Pillar focuses on knowledge and skills progression, emphasising that curriculum is sequenced in a coherent way and that students revisit, connect and apply previously taught material. This supports consolidation and ensures students are ready for higher‑order application.

  • Meaningful feedback & dialogue
    The ‘Assess and Adapt’ Pillar emphasises feedback and responsive teaching: the need for formative assessment, timely responses to student work, peer/self‑assessment, and use of assessment tools to refine teaching. This aligns with “meaningful feedback” in our definition.

  • Growing independence
    Again,‘Climate and Character’ and ‘Success for All’ underlines student agency and metacognition: students being taught how to learn, reflect on their learning, regulate their own progress, and take increasingly independent responsibility for their learning. This links directly to our “growing independence”.

By consistently aligning our classroom design, teaching strategies and student experiences with these Pillars, we make our definition of learning tangible.

What Implications Does Our Definition of Learning Have for Teaching Practices at WA?

Given the definition above and how it aligns with our WA Pillars, what does this mean for you as a teacher at Westminster Academy? Here are key implications for teaching practice across our school:

  1. Intentional lesson design that balances acquisition, consolidation and application

    • Plan sequences of lessons where students are not only introduced to new content but given structured time to revisit, rehearse and apply it.

    • Incorporate tasks that require meaningful cognitive effort rather than low‑demand recall alone.

    • Design “application” opportunities: problem solving, real‑world contexts, cross‑disciplinary links.

  2. Ensuring challenge is appropriately pitched — and scaffolded

    • Use prior attainment and ongoing assessment to ensure tasks stretch students but remain accessible with support.

    • Employ scaffolding early on, gradually remove it as students gain fluency so independence grows.

    • Monitor student thinking actively in class (through questioning, mini‑whiteboards, live feedback) so you can adapt challenge in the moment.

  3. Using responsive teaching methods

    • Create opportunities for immediate feedback (teacher, peer, self) and embed follow‑up actions: what will the student do next to improve?

    • Reflect on student work and learning gaps at the end of lessons: adapt subsequent teaching accordingly.

    • Encourage students to reflect: “What did I do well? What could I do better? What will I do next?”

  4. Developing metacognitive skills and student agency

    • Teach students how to learn: how to plan, monitor, evaluate their own learning, and choose strategies.

    • Embed opportunities for independent work where students set their own targets, reflect, and adjust strategies.

    • Foster classroom culture where mistakes are seen as part of learning and where students learn how to respond to challenge constructively.

  5. Promoting wider learner development (confidence, responsibility, curiosity, citizenship)

    • Incorporate tasks which develop students’ confidence (e.g., presentations, group work, pair work).

    • Encourage responsibility: homework tasks that require planning, self‑checklists, peer review.

    • Link learning to civic/global contexts where possible: embed opportunities for students to understand the broader implications of their learning and develop as responsible citizens.

  6. Consistent use of the WA Pillars as an everyday reference point

    • Use the language of the Pillars in your classroom: refer to ‘challenge’, ‘agency’, ‘feedback’, ‘knowledge progression’, ‘whole body listening’, ‘build up to scaffold removal’

    • Share with students how your task connects to a WA Pillar or how the Pillar is supporting their learning journey.

    • Reflect as a department or team: how are our practices across the curriculum aligning with the Pillars and hence supporting our definition of learning?

In essence: our definition of learning demands that teaching in Westminster Academy is purposeful, responsive, challenging, metacognitively aware, and wide‑ranging in its ambition for learners. It means we must consistently design and deliver lessons that do more than cover content: they must build deep understanding, encourage independence, nurture character and equip our students for a rapidly changing world.

Let this shared definition and the WA Pillars guide every lesson, every planning meeting, every piece of feedback and every conversation. In doing so we ensure that every student at Westminster Academy benefits from a coherent, powerful learning experience — one that truly transforms.