Skip to content
Practical systems for real teachersPractical systems for real teachers
  • Courses
  • Insights
  • About
  • Sign Up
  • Login
0

Currently Empty: ¥0

Continue shopping

Practical systems for real teachersPractical systems for real teachers
  • Courses
  • Insights
  • About
  • Sign Up
  • Login

From Lessons to Growth: Why I Stopped Just Teaching and Started Designing a Teacher Growth System

  • Home
  • Teaching Intelligence Graph
  • From Lessons to Growth: Why I Stopped Just Teaching and Started Designing a Teacher Growth System
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Breadcrumb Abstract Shape
Teaching Intelligence Graph

From Lessons to Growth: Why I Stopped Just Teaching and Started Designing a Teacher Growth System

  • 03/04/2026
  • Com 0

From Teaching to Growth: Growth Loop by Thuc Phan C.

There was a moment not long ago when I realized something uncomfortable.

I was teaching every day.
I was planning lessons, adjusting activities, supporting children.
I was doing everything a “good teacher” is supposed to do.

…but I wasn’t really growing.

Not in a clear, visible, structured way.

And I started asking myself:

👉 Why do we expect children to grow systematically… but not teachers?

That question changed everything for me.


🌱 1. Teaching is happening—but growth is invisible

In most schools, growth looks like this:

  • You gain experience over time
  • You attend occasional training
  • You “feel” like you are improving

But there is no:

  • Clear record of what you tried
  • Reflection on what worked
  • Connection between actions and skills

👉 Growth is happening… but it’s invisible, unstructured, and easy to forget.

Compare that with how we teach children:

  • We observe
  • We document
  • We assess
  • We adjust

So I started wondering:

👉 What if teachers had the same system?


🧠 2. Courses don’t change teaching—practice does

I’ve taken courses.
I’ve designed courses.
I believe in them.

But here’s the truth:

👉 Courses don’t change teaching.
👉 What you do after the course does.

Most platforms stop at:

  • Watch → Learn → Complete

But real teaching looks like:

  • Try → Fail → Adjust → Try again

That gap is where most professional development fails.

So instead of asking:
👉 “How can I build better courses?”

I started asking:
👉 “How can I support what happens AFTER the lesson?”


🔁 3. I designed a simple loop: Learn → Apply → Reflect → Grow

Everything I’m building now is based on one simple loop:

👉 Learn → Apply → Record → Reflect → Grow

This is not theory.
This is what teachers already do—just unconsciously.

So I made it visible.

Example:

  • Learn a strategy about classroom management
  • Try it in class
  • Record what happened
  • Reflect on what worked / didn’t
  • Identify the skill you are building

👉 That’s real professional growth.


🧩 4. I replaced “notes” with “scenarios”

Teachers often write notes like:

  • “Today was difficult”
  • “Students didn’t listen”

But those notes don’t help us grow.

So I changed the structure.

Instead of notes → I use scenarios:

Each scenario includes:

  • What happened
  • What I did
  • What worked / didn’t
  • What I learned

👉 This small shift changed everything.

Now I can:

  • See patterns
  • Track improvement
  • Connect actions to skills

📊 5. Growth becomes visible (and motivating)

Something surprising happened.

When I started recording my experiences:

👉 I became more motivated.

Why?

Because now I could see:

  • “I handled behavior 3 times this week”
  • “I improved my transitions”
  • “I’m still struggling with engagement”

👉 Growth became something I could SEE.

And once you see progress… you want to continue.


🧭 6. Skills become real—not just words

We often say things like:

  • “Good classroom management”
  • “Strong communication”

But what do those actually mean?

In my system, skills are built through evidence:

  • Each scenario links to a skill
  • Skills are built through repeated actions

👉 Not just something you say
👉 But something you can show

This is very different from certificates.


⚖️ 7. Certificates vs Real Teaching Evidence

Let’s be honest.

Certificates say:

  • “You completed a course”

But they don’t show:

  • What you actually did
  • How you handled real situations
  • How you improved over time

Now imagine instead:

👉 A teacher profile that shows:

  • Real classroom situations
  • Actions taken
  • Reflections
  • Skill growth

Which one is more meaningful?


⚡ 8. Teachers don’t need more content—they need support in the moment

One thing I realized quickly:

Teachers are not lacking content.

They are lacking:

👉 Support at the moment they need it

Example:

  • A child is not listening
  • A lesson is not working
  • A transition becomes chaotic

In that moment, teachers don’t think:

❌ “Let me watch a 2-hour course”

They need:

👉 Quick ideas
👉 Real examples
👉 Practical strategies

That’s why this system focuses on real situations, not just theory.


🤝 9. This is not just a system—it’s a mindset shift

At first, I thought I was building a tool.

Now I realize:

👉 I’m changing how I think about teaching.

From:

  • “Did I finish the lesson?”

To:

  • “What did I learn from today?”

From:

  • “Was the class good or bad?”

To:

  • “What skill am I building?”

This shift is powerful.


🚀 10. Why I’m sharing this (and why you might try it)

I’m not writing this because I have everything figured out.

I’m still building.
Still testing.
Still improving.

But I can already see this:

👉 Teaching becomes more intentional
👉 Growth becomes visible
👉 Motivation becomes internal

And most importantly:

👉 You feel like you are developing, not just working


🌿 A small invitation

If you’re a teacher reading this, I invite you to try something simple:

After your next class, write:

  • What happened
  • What you tried
  • What worked / didn’t
  • What you would change

Do this for 3–5 days.

You might start to see something:

👉 Patterns
👉 Progress
👉 Possibilities


I’m currently building this into a system (KNW Kids), but honestly:

👉 The system is just a tool.

The real change is:

👉 How we see our own growth as teachers

And maybe…

that’s where everything begins.

Tags:
classroom practiceedtech innovationinstructional designteacher development systemteacher professional growthteacher reflection
Share on:
Rethinking Game-Based Learning in the Age of AI

Search

Timeline Posts

  • April 2026
  • March 2026

Categories

  • Behavior Development (1)
  • Build Your Training Career (1)
  • Child Development (1)
  • Supporting Behavior (1)
  • Teaching in the Age of AI (1)
  • Teaching Intelligence Graph (1)
KNW Kids Logo (1200 x 600 px)

Build Your Teaching System

Online Platform

  • KNW Instructors
  • Courses

Links

  • Contact Us
  • Blogs

Subscribe to our insights

Icon-facebook Icon-linkedin2 Icon-instagram Icon-twitter Icon-youtube
Copyright 2025 knwkids.com | Developed By Cephan. All Rights Reserved
Practical systems for real teachersPractical systems for real teachers
Sign inSign up

Sign in

Don’t have an account? Sign up
Lost your password?

Sign up

Already have an account? Sign in