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Discover key psychological findings to enhance teaching practices and improve student engagement in history lessons. Explore effective strategies based on research to optimize learning outcomes in the classroom. Unlock the power of psychology to enrich historical education.
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Five psychological findings every history teacher should know Harry Fletcher-Wood
Five psychological findings every history teacher should know Harry Fletcher-Wood (fraud)
A recent local news story (Hackney Today) • First bullet point here • Second bullet point here • Third bullet point here
Preventing dog fouling • First bullet point here • Second bullet point here • Third bullet point here • Waterproof poster • Charges during the day • Glows for ten hours each night
Preventing petty ‘theft’ • First bullet point here • Second bullet point here • Third bullet point here • An honesty tea kitty in a university kitchen. • Each week, over the kitty, a different image, unexplained. • Which week saw the highest contributions?
Preventing petty ‘theft’ • First bullet point here • Second bullet point here • Third bullet point here • The (scary) eyes have it • Dog fouling is more prevalent in winter (people can’t be seen)
The power of psychology • First bullet point here • Second bullet point here • Third bullet point here • What a great way to start a session…
A great start (for Hackney, for today) • Except… • The instinctive feelings of revulsion and disgust which you may have felt • Image credit: Rachael Towne
Knowledge is power • “To have more, we must produce more. To produce more, we must know more.” • Knowledge (of psychology) is (another kind of) power • Enabling – like history
Five findings, some applicationsand some caveats • A (historical) practitioner’s take • May: • Validate; • Increase understanding of; or • Offer a new perspective on… your existing practice • Trying to make it concrete • Image Credit – Digitalbob8
1) Once upon a time… • There was a teacher…
1) But gradually… • He came to realise…
1) Stories are “psychologically privileged” (Willingham) • The mind is "exquisitely tuned to understand & remember stories“ • Easy to comprehend • Interesting • Easy to remember • “One death is a tragedy…
1) Four elements of a good story (Willingham) • Causality • Conflict • Complications • Character Image credit: Tom
1) What are we teaching? • Making room for the story • Building around the story… • Lessons • Units • Schemes Using the 4C’s cf sessions at the conference Lost in Time – When would you want to be stuck? Can you survive the Reformation?
2) Attempting to learn more Swedish • Memrise
2) The Memrise approach • Testing when needed
2) Ebbinghaus’s Forgetting Curve • As soon as you’ve learned it,it’s on the way out
2) Accepting & addressing forgetting • Interleaving (pros & cons) • Repeated card sorts • Repeated testing • Test-revise-test • Changing tests(same material, different test each time)
3) The Illuminati • Killed Michael Jackson • Organised 9/11 • Faked the moon landings • Are feeding delusional history teachers the rot they teach Image credit: Simiapath
3) Flippancy aside • “If it wasn’t for Martin Luther King I’d be a slave right now.” • “Yes, but really, why did Germans hate Jewish people?” • “Why aren’t we studying dinosaurs?” • [Insert your least favourite here] Image Credit: Mark Anderson
3) Confirmation bias • We discount contradicting evidence (and it can strengthen our beliefs) • When told an answer, we assume we know it (discounting differences and stopping listening) • We are unaware we’re doing it Image credit: Brett Jordan
3) Solutions are limited, but how about… • “I’m glad that no one’s fallen into the trap of…” • Limiting ‘air time’ for dissent • Holding out on the ‘answer’ to force through the thinking • Pausing to marshal evidence next lesson Image credit: @jamestheo
4) Social-psychological interventions • For example • At the beginning of the school year, students wrote about values that were important to them. • Increased black students’ grades • Reduced ‘racial achievement gap’ by 40% • Discernible effect on black students’ GPA 2 years later • Enlist students • Stealthy • Recursive • Brief, cheap, effective • Tested through RCTs
4a) Students identify reasons a topic matters Original study • Each month, students wrote how what they had studied in science could be applied in their lives. -> Higher grades for prior poor performers Adaptation • How is the history we have learned useful or relevant to you/to modern life? • Prompts - Think beyond ‘a test’ and give examples.
4b) Students persuade others they can succeed Original study • Read about new students’ fears; write a speech to younger students about how they evaporate. -> Significant effect three years later. Adaptation • Year 9 give advice to next year’s Year 9; Year 13 give advice on coursework prior to second unit.
5) The experiencing self and the remembering self • Two different people… • We remember the peak and the end of our experiences Image Credit: Anders Adermark
5) What effect are you going for? • Coherence – an answer • Intrigue – tune in next week… • Anger/righteous indignation • Determination • Image credit:Migel Sousa
5) What effect are you going for? • Managing tensions: • Avoiding trivialisation • Returning to objectives & moving on • Embedding memories • Managing mood (predictability) • Getting to the deep subject knowledge The Cambridge Conclusions Project
What do you make of it…? • Stories • Repeated testing • Confirmation bias • Social-psychological interventions • Peak-end rule • Questions • Ideas • Challenges
Thank you • improvingteaching.co.uk • @hfletcherwood • harry.fletcher-wood@teachfirst.org.uk • This draws heavily on: • Daniel Willingham • Daniel Kahneman • Yeager and Wilton • Robert Bjork et all (mostly channelled through David Didau/@learningspy)