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A brief history of HE funding
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1. The importance of (learning and) teaching to the Institute of EducationDylan Wiliam
2. A brief history of HE funding
Integration of funding pre-1992 and post-1992 universities
Research
Quality based mechanism (RAE)
QR supports a maximum of 50% of academic staff salary
Teaching
Quality-independent mechanism (tolerance bands)
Fee caps too low for discrimination between providers
Commodification of teaching
3. Future developments Quality-related student contributions to tuition costs
Need to achieve, and demonstrate, increased quality
The death of distance
for distance learning students
but also for students attending full-time
To secure its future, the Institute needs to become as demonstrably excellent for its teaching as it is for its research
4. Enrolment on modules in 2008
5. Teaching: a scarily complex activity
6.
and we are largely on our own
Two extremes
Teachers doing the learning for the learners
Teachers facilitating learning
Key concept
Teachers do not create learning
Learners create learning
But all teachers can do is teach (learning vs. teaching)
Teaching is the engineering of effective learning environments
Psychology underdetermines pedagogy
Teaching is fundamentally a creative activity
Creativity is very widely distributed, but often suppressed
7. Curriculum: a selection from culture
Balanced
Rigorous
Vertically integrated
Focused Principles of curriculum design
8. Signature pedagogies
9. In Law
10. In Medicine
11. Effective learning environments Create student engagement
pedagogies of engagement
Well-regulated
pedagogies of contingency
Develop habits of mind
pedagogies of formation
12. Pedagogies of engagement Intelligence is partly inherited
So what?
Intelligence is partly environmental
Environment creates intelligence
Intelligence creates environment
Dual-pathway theory (Boekaerts)
Well-being
Growth
Learning environments
Inclusive
Varied
Efficient
13. Active learning roles? The TIMSS video studies of middle-school mathematics classrooms looked at the proportion of teacher words to student words in randomly selected examples of classroom practice
USA 8
Japan 13
Hong Kong 16
14. Hinge-point question On average, across all the award-bearing teaching at the Institute,how many teacher words are there per student word?
More student words than teacher words
About equal numbers of teacher words and student words
Three times as many teacher words as student words
Five times as many teacher words as student words
More than five times as many teacher words as student words
15. Motivation: cause or effect?
16. Pedagogies of contingency Learning is unpredictable
Learners do not learn what we teach
It is only through assessment that we can connect what we do as teachers to its outcomes (like so many bottles thrown out into the sea; Perrenoud 1998)
Assessment is therefore the bridge between teaching and learning, and thus the central process of teaching (as opposed to lecturing)
A large, and growing literature providing evidence of the beneficial effects of formative assessment
17. Formative assessment
18. Dealing with diversity Ignore it (one-size-fits-all)
Individualize instruction (made-to-measure)
Personalization
Mass customization (rather than mass production or individualization)
Diversity becomes a valuable instructional resource
19. Hinge-point question An experimental study of a new method of teaching reading reports that a result was significant (p<0.05). This means that:
The experimental group out-performed the control group by 5%
There is a 5% chance that the experimental group did not out-perform the control group
There is a 5% chance that there is no difference between the experimental group and the treatment group
There is only a 5% chance that the observed result would have happened if the experimental and control groups had the same achievement
20. Hinge-point question Which of the following is the most important difference between the theories of Piaget and Vygotsky?
Piaget places greater importance on the role of conservation in cognitive development.
Vygotsky places greater importance on the role of cultural artifacts in cognitive development.
Vygotsky did not believe in distinct stages of cognitive development.
Piaget was a social constructivist while Vygotsky placed greater emphasis on cultural-historical activity theory
21. Other supports for contingency All-student response systems
ABCD cards
Exit-pass questions
22. Hinge-point question Summarize the key principles of the following schools of psychology on the appropriate coloured card
Associationism (blue)
Information processing (orange)
Constructivism (red)
Situated approaches (green)
23. Pedagogies of formation Instilling disciplinary habits of mind
History
Philosophy
Statistics
Instilling critical perspectives
Values
24. Improving our practice
25. The limitations of consciousness
26. Knowledge transfer and creation
27. Improvements in pediatric cardiac surgery
28. Impact on life expectancy
29. No excuse for making the same mistakes over and over again
But no excuse for not making mistakes
Make new mistakes (Esther Dyson)
30. Summary Excellence in teaching is vital to the future success of the Institute
Every single one of us needs to improve as a teacher
Not because we are not good enough
But because we can be better
The Institute needs to play a leading role in developing signature pedagogies for Education and related Social Science
31. Closing thoughts In a completely rational society, the best of us would aspire to be teachers and the rest of us would have to settle for less, because passing civilization along from one generation to the next ought to be the highest honor and highest responsibility anyone could have.
Lee Iacocca