310 likes | 431 Views
Evidence Informing Practice . Robert Coe ASCL Annual Conference , 2 1 March 2014. Outline. What can research tell us about the likely impacts and costs of different strategies? How do we implement these strategies to … Focus on what matters Change classroom practice
E N D
Evidence Informing Practice Robert Coe ASCL Annual Conference, 21 March 2014
Outline • What can research tell us about the likely impacts and costs of different strategies? • How do we implement these strategiesto … • Focus on what matters • Change classroom practice • Target areas of need • Produce demonstrable benefits Improving Education: A triumph of hope over experience http://www.cem.org/attachments/publications/ImprovingEducation2013.pdf
Toolkit of Strategies to Improve Learning The Sutton Trust-EEF Teaching and Learning Toolkit http://www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit/
www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit Impact vs cost Most promising for raising attainment 8 May be worth it Feedback Meta-cognitive Peer tutoring Early Years Homework (Secondary) 1-1 tuition Effect Size (months gain) Collaborative Behaviour Small gp tuition Phonics Parental involvement Smaller classes ICT Social Summer schools Individualised learning Small effects / high cost After school Mentoring Homework (Primary) Teaching assistants Performance pay Aspirations 0 Ability grouping £0 £1000 Cost per pupil
Key messages • Some things that are popular or widely thought to be effective are probably not worth doing • Ability grouping (setting); After-school clubs; Teaching assistants; Smaller classes; Performance pay; Raising aspirations • Some things look ‘promising’ • Effective feedback; Meta-cognitive and self regulation strategies; Peer tutoring/peer‐assisted learning strategies; Homework
Clear, simple advice: • Choose from the top left • Go back to school and do it For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong H.L. Mencken
Why not? • We have been doing some of these things for a long time, but have generally not seen improvement • Research evidence is problematic • Sometimes the existing evidence is thin • Research studies may not reflect real life • Context and ‘support factors’ may matter • Implementation is problematic • We may think we are doing it, but are we doing it right? • We do not know how to get large groups of teachers and schools to implement these interventions in ways that are faithful, effective and sustainable
Four steps to improvement • Think hard about learning • Invest in good professional development • Evaluate teaching quality • Evaluate impact of changes
www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit Impact vs cost Most promising for raising attainment 8 May be worth it Feedback Meta-cognitive Peer tutoring Early Years Homework (Secondary) 1-1 tuition Effect Size (months gain) Collaborative Behaviour Small gp tuition Phonics Parental involvement Smaller classes ICT Social Summer schools Individualised learning Small effects / high cost After school Mentoring Homework (Primary) Teaching assistants Performance pay Aspirations 0 Ability grouping £0 £1000 Cost per pupil
Which strategies/interventions are very surprising (you really don’t believe it)? • Which strategies/interventions can you explain why they do (or don’t) improve attainment? • Which strategies/interventions o you want to know more about?
Poor Proxies for Learning • Students are busy: lots of work is done (especially written work) • Students are engaged, interested, motivated • Students are getting attention: feedback, explanations • Classroom is ordered, calm, under control • Curriculum has been ‘covered’ (ie presented to students in some form) • (At least some) students have supplied correct answers, even if they • Have not really understood them • Could not reproduce them independently • Will have forgotten it by next week (tomorrow?) • Already knew how to do this anyway
A better proxy for learning? Learning happens when people have to think hard
Hard questions about your school • How many minutes does an average pupil on an average day spend really thinking hard? • Do you really want pupils to be ‘stuck’ in your lessons? • If they knew the right answer but didn’t know why, how many pupils would care?
How do we get students to learn hard things? Eg • Place value • Persuasive writing • Music composition • Balancing chemical equations • Explain what they should do • Demonstrate it • Get them to do it (with gradually reducing support) • Provide feedback • Get them to practise until it is secure • Assess their skill/ understanding
How do we get teachers to learn hard things? Eg • Using formativeassessment • Assertive discipline • How to teachalgebra • Explain what they should do
What CPD helps learners? • Intense: at least 15 contact hours, preferably 50 • Sustained: over at least two terms • Content focused: on teachers’ knowledge of subject content & how students learn it • Active: opportunities to try it out & discuss • Supported: external feedback and networks to improve and sustain • Evidence based: promotes strategies supported by robust evaluation evidence Do you do this?
Why monitor? • Strong evidence of (potential) benefit from • Performance feedback(Coe, 2002) • Target setting (Locke & Latham, 2006) • Intelligent accountability (Wiliam 2010) • Individual teachers matter most • Everyone can improve • Teachers stop improving after 3-5 years • Judging real quality/effectiveness is very hard • Multidimensional • Not easily visible • Confounded
Monitoring the quality of teaching • Progress in assessments • Quality of assessment matters (cem.org/blog) • Regular, high quality assessment across curriculum (InCAS, INSIGHT) • Classroom observation • Much harder than you think! (cem.org/blog) • Multiple observations/ers, trained and QA’d • Student ratings • Extremely valuable, if done properly (http://www.cem.org/latest/student-evaluation-of-teaching-can-it-raise-attainment-in-secondary-schools) • Other • Parent ratings feedback • Student work scrutiny • Colleague perceptions (360) • Self assessment • Pedagogical content knowledge
Teacher Assessment • How do you know that it has captured understanding of key concepts? • vs ‘check-list’ (eg ‘;’=L5, 3 tenses=L7) • How do you know standards are comparable? • Across teachers, schools, subjects • Is progress good? • How have you resolved tensions from teacher judgments being used to judge teachers?
Evidence-Based Lesson Observation • Behaviour and organisation • Maximise time on task, engagement, rules & consequences • Classroom climate • Respect, quality of interactions, failure OK, high expectations, growth mindset • Learning • What made students think hard? • Quality of: exposition, demonstration, scaffolding, feedback, practice, assessment • What provided evidence of students’ understanding? • How was this responded to? (Feedback)
Next generation of CEM systems … • Assessments that are • Comprehensive, across the full range of curriculum areas, levels, ages, topics and educationally relevant abilities • Diagnostic, with evidence-based follow-up • Interpretable, calibrated against norms and criteria • High psychometric quality • Feedback that is • Bespoke to individual teacher, for their students and classes • Multi-component, incorporating learning gains, pupil ratings, peer feedback, self-evaluation, … • Diagnostic, with evidence-based follow-up • Constant experimenting
School ‘improvement’ often isn’t • School would have improved anyway • Volunteers/enthusiasts improve: misattributed to intervention • Chance variation (esp. if start low) • Poor outcome measures • Perceptions of those who worked hard at it • No robust assessment of pupil learning • Poor evaluation designs • Weak evaluations more likely to show positive results • Improved intake mistaken for impact of intervention • Selective reporting • Dredging for anything positive (within a study) • Only success is publicised (Coe, 2009, 2013)
Key elements of good evaluation EEF DIY Evaluation Guide • Clear, well defined, replicable intervention • Good assessment of appropriate outcomes • Well-matched comparison group What could you evaluate?
Summary … • Think hard about learning • Invest in good CPD • Evaluate teaching quality • Evaluate impact of changes Robert.Coe@cem.dur.ac.uk @ProfCoe www.cem.org