How Students Show What They Know in Order to Grow

What It Means to Demonstrate Learning
At Graland, learning is not measured by tests or worksheets alone. It is reflected in how students make sense of what they are learning and share that understanding with others.

Across grades and classes, educators create regular opportunities for students to demonstrate their learning.
A demonstration of learning can take many forms, from presentations and design challenges to performances and debates. In each case, students are asked to demonstrate their understanding by sharing their thinking with an audience, which may include classmates, educators, or the broader community.

It’s not just about arriving at an answer, but about making meaning, communicating ideas, and connecting with others.

“Demonstrations of learning are opportunities for students to show what they know in creative and student-owned ways,” Associate Director of Curriculum & Instruction Ms. Nikki Spiers said. “They move learning beyond memorization and toward synthesis, helping students make meaningful connections to the real world.”

Why It Matters
Demonstrations of learning give educators a clearer picture of what a student understands.

Rather than seeing only a final answer or a test score, educators can see how students think, explain ideas, make connections, collaborate with peers, and work through challenges. This allows educators to respond in the moment and adjust instruction to better support each student’s growth.

For students, these experiences shift the focus from simply completing work to making sense of their learning. When they know they will be sharing their thoughts with others, they begin to think not just about what they know, but how they want to explain it.

As students continue this work across classes and grades, they build confidence. They see themselves as learners who can generate ideas, explain their thinking, and engage in conversation with others.

How It Takes Shape at Graland
Demonstrations of learning are thoughtfully designed and supported across the Graland program.

Educators collaborate with colleagues, administrators, and community partners to create meaningful opportunities for students to share their work. Professional development and ongoing conversations about teaching and learning support faculty in shaping these experiences.

“Through collaboration with colleagues and community partners, we are able to create authentic audiences that give these experiences real meaning,” Ms. Spiers said.

Access to a range of resources, from classroom materials and technology to spaces like the Gates Invention and Innovation Lab, allows students to explore different ways to represent their learning in ways that reflect who they are. Small class sizes further support this work, enabling educators to design experiences that both challenge and support each student.

Together, these elements create an environment where students regularly communicate their ideas with a clear purpose and an audience in mind.

How It Grows Across K–8
Across the Lower and Middle School years, educators work alongside students to design demonstrations of learning that are developmentally appropriate, intentionally building in opportunities for growth, creativity, and increasing independence at each stage.

In the Lower School, the focus is on helping students find their voice. Students begin by expressing their thinking in supported settings, from Poetry Cafés and Publishing Parties to events such as the Biomimicry Science Expo. As they move through the grades, they take on more active roles and have more choice in the process, leading math games, conducting interviews, and designing solutions through projects such as water filtration challenges or mini-golf courses. These experiences build a foundation in organizing ideas, speaking with clarity, and presenting their work to others.

In Middle School, students carry this work forward by applying their learning through experiences such as the Greek Myth open house, Empty Bowls presentation, and the Memory Box project. They connect ideas across subjects, consider multiple perspectives, and communicate their thinking with greater precision.

By eighth grade, students reflect on their learning through experiences such as the Civil Rights gallery walk. In this project, they present work shaped by a driving question and their experiences during a class trip through the American South. This work leads into Capstone, where students spend the year researching global issues, engaging in service, and taking action in their communities. They ultimately complete Capstone presentations that reflect their interests, perspectives, and readiness for what comes next.

Looking Ahead
At Graland, demonstrations of learning cultivate habits and skills that extend beyond any single project or classroom experience. These moments support the school’s goal of graduating students who embody the Attributes of a Graduate, including creativity, authenticity, agency, adaptability, responsibility, curiosity, empathy, perspective, insight, and purpose.

Students are called on to think creatively, communicate clearly, and apply their learning in meaningful ways. Through ongoing opportunities to reflect and share their thinking, they gain the confidence to stand and deliver in public speaking settings while learning to connect with their audience.

By the time students leave Graland, they are prepared not just to continue their learning but to engage thoughtfully with the world around them. They think independently, communicate with purpose, and step into new opportunities with imagination and a strong sense of self, equipped to navigate an ever-changing world. 
Samples of Demonstrations of Learning Across K-8

Kindergarten:
  • Publishing Parties
  • Rodeo Design Project
  • Poetry Café
  • Family Crests Project
Grade 1:
  • “This Is Me” Presentations
  • Biomimicry Science Expo
  • Spanish Puppet Shows
  • Neighborhood Stores Simulation

Grade 2:
  • Seed Dispersal Design Challenge & Share Out
  • Teaching Math Games
  • Reader’s Theater Performances
  • Biography Expo
Grade 3:
  • Human Library Interviews
  • Colorado Regions Relief Maps & Gallery Walk
  • Science Fair
  • Original Drama Performances
Grade 4:
  • Math Mini Golf Course Design
  • Harlem Renaissance Project
  • Water Filter Design Challenge & Share Out
  • Trout Release Day & Information Station
Grade 5:
  • Greek Myth Open House
  • Rock Cycle Projects
  • Ancient Survivor Debates
  • Poetry Parade Performance
Grade 6:
  • Literary Menu Boards Project
  • Empty Bowls Presentation
  • Number Exploration Presentations
  • Drama Monologues
Grade 7:
  • Podcasts for Change
  • Memory Box Project
  • Colony Flag Design & Presentation
  • Math in the Real World Presentations
Grade 8:
  • Civil Rights Reflections & Gallery Walk
  • Spanish Food Truck Project
  • UpWords Speeches
  • Capstone Projects



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Graland Country Day School

Graland Country Day School is a private school in Denver, Colorado, serving students in preschool, kindergarten, elementary, and middle school. Founded in Denver in 1927, Graland incorporates a rich, experiential learning approach in a traditional classroom setting, emphasizing the development of globally and socially conscious leaders who excel academically.