the stakes are the engagement
You wrote a lesson plan with objectives, activities, and assessment. There's no story.
The kids checked out at slide three. Lesson plans built only around objectives and activities miss the part of learning that's actually sticky: stakes. A lesson plan without stakes is a checklist. A lesson plan with stakes is a story the student can't help following. We talk about narrative stakes in lesson design, the Maven hook-stakes-payoff structure, and how to turn a unit into a serial that students actually want to come back to. This works for kindergarten and grad school. The brain doesn't change much.
Checklist lesson · serial lesson
| Checklist | Serial |
|---|---|
| Objective stated dry | Hook: 'Why does this matter?' |
| Activity assigned | Stakes: 'What happens if we get this wrong?' |
| Assessment as test | Payoff: 'Now you can do X' |
| No memory the next day | Wants the next episode |
The hook-stakes-payoff lesson rewrite
- Open with a hook: a question, an image, a tension.
- Establish stakes: what's at risk if we don't learn this?
- Build the content with mini-cliffhangers between sections.
- End with a payoff: 'Now you can solve X.'
- Tease the next lesson at the bottom. Make them want it.
A lesson plan without stakes is a checklist. A lesson plan with stakes is a story. Brains remember stories. They forget checklists by Tuesday.
— L.A. Walton, The Book Maven
From the Maven Catalog
- Master Course — Lessons With Stakes
- eBook — Teach Like a Serial
- Toolkit — Educator's Toolkit
- Planner — Curriculum Planner
Rewrite next week's plan with hook, stakes, payoff. Tease the next lesson. The students come back hungry. Teaching becomes more sustainable. So do the test scores.