As I said a lot of new technology is being
built.
But it's very easy to be distracted by
this technology.
It's easy to forget what to focus on
because of all the shiny visuals.
Simultaneously technology can open new
doors or
put in new constraints on our pedagrophy.
So let's think again, let's refocus.
When we teach what should we care about
the most?
Well I have some practical experience as
an
instructor but i am not an expert in
education.
So i rely on a influential study by John
Hand.
He looked at 800 hundred meta-analysis and
synthesized them.
He was looking for what influences
learning.
Which circumstances, tools and techniques
or which had
the best effects or which just had average
effects.
So let's pick and choose a few of those
factors in no order at the moment.
The first is physical attributes.
The class size, for
instance.
It's clear that this is relevant to the
setting.
The second factor is computer-assisted
instruction.
It's also clear that this is crucial in
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There are other factors that will affect
teaching,
things that are mainly more intrinsic to
the student.
Course we would like to think that we can
teach anyone, but we expect the
students disposition to garn their
intrinsic motivation to
have to be a factor in the outcome.
In some way mooks have a self-selected
audience for now so this is mitigated.
There's also the factor of the student's
prior cognitive ability.
Think of something like their IQ, for
instance.
We have little control there.
Fortunately, there are part we can
actually change.
The instructional quality of the course,
for instance.
That is, the student's perception of the
quality of the instruction they get.
According to Hadley's definition.
What about individualization?
The design of a learning program
specifically the student.
Or maybe mastery learning.
This is when student are giving test
on relatively easy material soon after
instruction.
And if it seems necessary there given more
work again.
They're retested until they get it.
Maybe a teacher could challenge students
by applying goals, but
there is also feedback which in Hadi's
mind which includes
positive reinforcement for what has been
done well, information about
needs to improve but also includes merely
clarifying the goals.
As part of the feedback.
There's also peer tutoring, where the
students explain, check, and assess each
other.
How about a good old test?
How about external factors, such as the
presence of a television at home?
Hattie identified 130 different such
factors.
I only picked a few here.
But it's already a lot of influencers on
the student's achievements.
But how do you rank them so we could make
sense of the potential thug of that large
number of influences.
So
what do you think ranked the best?
What ranked the worst?
You can maybe guess that television is the
worst.
That seems kind of an obvious candidate in
fact television slowed down a students
progress.
Next up and very controversially was class
size.
This is still very much at the bottom in
fact the data indicates
inconclusively that small class sizes have
a
tiny positive effect on the students
learning.
The best way to make sense of
this is probably to better understand
Hattie's methodology.
This result comes after accounting for all
the other effects, if all else remains
equal.
So if a politician somewhere bases a
decision on this study, and
blindly doubles the class size of all the
classrooms in their country.
Presumably formed by firing half of the
teachers.
Well the teacher that remain will be
suddenly swamped with work.
And enable to do some of the other
techniques that actually have a very
positive effect.
So this would be bad.
On to the positive effects.
When Haddie performed this study he very
well understood
that most of those techniques had a
positive effect.
The point was to identify those that were
most effective.
So we set the bar at the average effect
size.
Obviously we're interested in the top
effects, those way above the bar.
But we should proceed methodalically.
Below that bar still with a positive
effect
but not so great are computer assisted
instruction.
Individualization and testing.
Above that and in a position that starts
to be
very useful are challenging students with
goal, peer tutoring, mastery learning.
And slightly above all those three the
student's disposition to learn.
But the three stellar effects
are feedback, student's prior cognitive
ability.
And instruction quality.
Each is at a level where you expect 50%
increase in the pace of learning.
Of course feedback is a bit of an umbrella
term here.
It covers pure feedback or mastery
learning for instance.
Also computer assistant goes up as more.
Yes, the course becomes more interactive
and more engaging and also that smaller
effects can be combined to accumulate
traction, so nothing should be fully
dismissed.
So, we now have Haddies final ranking for
the effects I've selected.
Why am I talking about this?
Well, because in mooks some of it is
especially relevant.
Mastery learning has been trumpeted again
and again for months.
We can offer a quiz sampling questions and
answers until the student gets it.
Interaction as well more and more mooks
have interactive components
that students can use to visually see what
they are learning.
So this is all a success story for mooks
integrating fully those effects in the
format you want.
Pure effects are also important and also
present in mooks.
But they're not full mastered yet.
There are some structured peer grading
components in mooks
but they're still in early stages and can
be improved.
Also, few people know for sure how to get
a forum started.
One that encourages students from all
backgrounds to engage with their peers.
I'm certainly no, not one of those
experts.
It's a skill, something that needs to be
learned and practiced.
Some of those experts, on the other hand,
might be lurking in this class.
So please help the discussion get started
on the forums if you feel you can help.
I would love to engage with all of you.
Share your opinion, don't be afraid.
There's definitely no right or wrong.
Even Hattie's study is open to criticism.
And especially my retelling of it.
This is education.
There is no one answer.
So, I would love to have a discussion on
the forums about all that.
The last effect I want to discuss that
will be the
next video is the most important according
to Hattie, that is feedback.
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