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The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

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The Cult of Outstanding David Didau Festival of Education – 21 st June
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Page 1: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

The Cult of Outstanding

David DidauFestival of Education – 21st

June

Page 2: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

We’re all wrong!

To err is human

Page 3: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

The Illusion of Naïve Realism

Page 4: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014
Page 5: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

What might we be wrong about?

• We don’t really know what learning is

• We can’t always trust ‘the experts’

• Just because we like it, doesn’t make it right.

Page 6: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

No one wants to wrong

• Confirmation Bias & The Backfire Effect

• The Illusion of Asymmetric Insight

• Sunk Cost Fallacy

• The Anchoring Effect & Availability Bias

Page 7: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

We’re all wrong!

From error springs insight

The importance of parallax

Page 8: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

What is ‘Outstanding’?

• Sustained & rapid progress • Consistently high expectations• Excellent subject knowledge • Systematic, accurate assessment • Well judged, imaginative teaching strategies • Sharply focused & timely support • Enthusiasm, participation & commitment• Resilience, confidence & independence • Frequent & consistently high quality feedback • Engagement, courtesy, collaboration &

cooperation.

Page 9: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Sustained & rapid progress

• Learning vs performance

Page 10: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

We believe “engaging in learning activities…transfers the content of the activity to the mind of the student…”

But “as learning occurs, so does forgetting…”

“learning takes time and is notencapsulated in the visible here-and-nowof classroom activities.”

Graham Nuthall (2005)

The input/output myth

Page 11: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Who said that?

Page 12: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Performance

Learning

Page 13: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Learning is invisible

• We can only infer learning from performance

• Performance is a very poor indicator of learning

• Reducing performance might actually increase learning

Robert A Bjork, UCLA

Page 14: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Sustained & rapid progress

• Learning vs. performance

• If nothing has changed in long-term memory, nothing has been learned

• Learning happens when you think hard

Page 15: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

But…

• “Anything that occupies your working memory reduces your ability to think.”

• “Memory is the residue of thought.”

Page 16: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Consistently high expectations

• Of course, but of what?

• Everyone should struggle

Page 17: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Excellent subject knowledge

• You got me!

• But what about ‘pedagogical content knowledge’?

Page 18: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Systematic, accurate assessment

• The problem with mark schemes

Page 19: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Well judged, imaginative teaching strategies

• Is ‘what works’ what’s best?

• How do we know what works?

Page 20: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Enthusiasm, participation & commitment

• Are these ‘poor proxies’?

Page 21: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

‘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’ (i.e. presented to

students in some form)• (At least some) students have supplied correct

answers (whether or not they really understood them or could reproduce them independently)

Rob Coe, CEM Durham University Improving Education: a triumph of hope over experience

Page 22: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Resilience, confidence & independence

• If ‘independent learning’ is the means, will independence be the end?

Page 23: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Explain Model

ScaffoldPractise

Teaching Sequence

for Independence

Page 24: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Frequent & consistently high quality feedback

Page 25: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

What Hattie actually saysFeedback is one of the most powerful influences on learning and achievement, but this impact can be either positive or negative.

Simply providing more feedback is not the answer, because it is necessary to consider the nature of the feedback, the timing, and how the student ‘receives’ this feedback (or, better, actively seeks the feedback) The Power of Feedback (2007)

Page 26: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

What Hattie actually saysWith inefficient learners, it is better for a teacher to provide elaborations through instruction than to provide feedback on poorly understood concepts… 

Feedback can only build on something; it is of little use when there is no initial learning or surface information. The Power of Feedback (2007)

Page 27: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Sharply focused & timely support

• But what is the right time?

Page 28: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Bjork on feedback

Empirical evidence suggests that delaying, reducing, and summarizing feedback can be better for long-term learning than providing immediate, trial-by-trial feedback. Numerous studies—some of them dating back decades—have shown that frequent and immediate feedback can, contrary to intuition, degrade learning.

Learning vs Performance (2013)

Page 29: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

But, why?

• Providing feedback of success is a waste of effort (opportunity cost)

• Immediate feedback can prevent memorisation

• Students can become dependent• Slows down pace of learning• ‘Spaced’ feedback has the most

powerful impact.

Page 30: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

Engagement, courtesy, collaboration & cooperation.

• More proxies?

• What % of feedback do pupils get from each other?

80%• And 80% of this is wrong!

Page 31: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

The Cult of Outstanding™

• ‘Outstanding’ lessons focus on performance at the expense of learning

• There is no such thing as an outstanding lesson

• Don’t get me started on lesson grades!

Page 32: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

What should we do?

• Abandon the Cult of Outstanding

• Use research to predict measurable and meaningful outcomes.

• Murder your darlings

Page 33: The Cult of Outstanding - Wellington 2014

For there’s nothing good or bad but thinking makes it

so.

@LearningSpylearningspy.co.uk

[email protected]


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