Teaching Methodologies

Our work in the classroom applies the perspective of multiple intelligences to the different content and learning objectives and uses team work to help all the students with their learning. 
Other active methodologies used in our classrooms include Visible Thinking, Evaluate to learn and Entrepreneurship.

Project-Based Learning

Project-Based Learning


This kind of methodology sparks the students' interest and encourages them to get involved. Learning activities are connected with the real world to help students get a better understanding of the content. Ultimately, our schools should be dream schools where all students enjoy the pleasure of learning.

To helps us in this area we receive support from Richard Gerver, one of the world's leading experts in educational innovation, and Alfredo Hernando, an educator and expert researcher in innovation.

Multiple Intelligences

Multiple Intelligences


The theory of multiple intelligences was put forward by Howard Gardner and views intelligence not in terms of a single unit that groups together different capabilities but rather as a set of different interdependent intelligences such as musical-rhythmic, bodily-kinaesthetic, logical-mathematical, verbal-linguistic, visual-spatial, interpersonal, intrapersonal and, the later added, naturalistic.

This theory was devised by Dr. Howard Gardner, psychologist, researcher and professor at the University of Harvard, and is very present in our classrooms.

Thinking-Based Learning

Thinking-Based Learning


Thinking-based learning is a method based on teaching thinking skills as part of standard curricular content.  According to this method, thinking, collaboration and communication are the main skills required for the 21st century.

Robert Swartz, director of the Center for Teaching Thinking (CTT) in Boston, USA, was the creator of this innovative methodology, which is applied in prestigious centres around the world.

Cooperative Learning

Cooperative Learning

Cooperative learning facilitates the active participation of students, improves their academic performance, helps accommodate diversity and creates an optimal emotional environment encouraging trust, friendship, companionship, etc.

At the Institució Familiar d'Educació schools we have been applying this methodology for years. Cooperative learning was first launched under the programme Cooperate to learn, learn to cooperate, led by Dr. Pere Pujolàs. It has since grown in scope and improved as a result of different people's contributions. David and Roger Johnson, two of the main experts in cooperative learning, are currently advising us in this area.

Creativity & Entrepreneurship

Creativity & Entrepreneurship

The creativity and entrepreneurship programme is being implemented at the Institute's schools through various projects designed to promote an entrepreneurial spirit and creative thinking. These projects often depart from the curriculum and are designed to prepare students to take decisions and resolve problems and conflicts. The activities employed aim to apply various methodologies, such as multiple intelligences, basic skills, cooperative learning and thinking skills, etc.

One of the techniques used is called "Six thinking hats" and was developed by Edward de Bono. It consists of imagining that each person has six hats. Each hat is a way of thinking that complements the others. De Bono proposed a method of thinking that does not follow the criteria of conventional logic and is based on alternatives, on the investigation of possibilities and the development of creativity.


Evaluate to Learn

Evaluate to Learn

Evaluating is much more than using a numerical value to determine the progress made by a student, it is an essential element for learning, since students who see their progress and know how to adapt to it are better prepared to advance and continue learning.

Strategies must therefore be found whereby students can share in and be involved in the evaluation process and be the protagonists of their own learning. The evaluation criteria applied in assessing school subjects and activities should also be coherent and shared with the rest of the teaching staff and the family.

Neus Sanmartí, doctor in Chemistry at the University of Barcelona, is training the Institute's teaching staff in how to use evaluation to make a real change to education.

Visible Thinking

Visible Thinking

Visible thinking is a line of research that was conceived at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. It focuses on developing students' thinking skills while enabling them to gain a deeper understanding of the content. It uses thinking routines as simple tools that help distinguish cognitive processes and make them visible so that they can be improved.

We have been implementing this initiative at our schools with the support of David Perkins, a doctor in Mathematics and Artificial Intelligence from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), so that we can lead students through their own thought processes to help them in their learning