Closing the gap Evidence-based use of the pupil premium

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Closing the gap Evidence-based use of the pupil premium Robert Coe Closing the Gap in North Yorkshire, Harrogate, 27 June 2014 @ProfCoe www.twitter.com/ ProfCoe

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@ ProfCoe. www.twitter.com/ProfCoe. Closing the gap Evidence-based use of the pupil premium. Robert Coe Closing the Gap in North Yorkshire, Harrogate, 27 June 2014. Outline. What can research tell us about the likely impacts and costs of different strategies? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Closing the gap Evidence-based  use of the pupil premium

Closing the gapEvidence-based use of the pupil premium

Robert CoeClosing the Gap in North Yorkshire, Harrogate, 27 June 2014

@ProfCoewww.twitter.com/ProfCoe

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Outline What can research tell us about the likely

impacts and costs of different strategies? How do we implement these strategies to …

1. Focus on what matters2. Change classroom practice3. Target areas of need4. Produce demonstrable benefits

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Improving Education: A triumph of hope over experiencehttp://www.cem.org/attachments/publications/ImprovingEducation2013.pdf

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Evidence about the effectiveness of different strategies

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Impact vs cost

Cost per pupil

Effec

t Size

(mon

ths g

ain)

£00

8

£1000

Meta-cognitive

Peer tutoringEarly Years1-1 tuitionHomework

(Secondary)

Teaching assistants

Mentoring

Summer schools After

school

AspirationsPerformance pay

Smaller classes

Setting

Most promising for raising attainment

May be worth it

Small effects /

high cost

Feedback

Phonics

Homework (Primary)

CollaborativeSmall gp

tuition Parental involvement

Individualised learning

ICT

Behaviour

Social

www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit

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Clear, simple advice:

Choose from the top left Go back to school and do it

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For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong

H.L. Mencken

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Why not? We have been doing some of these things

for a long time, but have generally not seen improvement

We do not know how to get large groups of teachers and schools to implement these interventions in ways that are – faithful, – effective– sustainable

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So what should we do?

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Four steps to improvement1. Focus on what matters

– Think hard about learning2. Change classroom practice

– Invest in good professional development3. Target areas of need

– Evaluate teaching quality4. Produce demonstrable benefits

– Evaluate impact of changes

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1. Focus on what mattersThink hard about learning

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True or false?1. Reducing class size is one of the most effective

ways to increase learning [evidence]

2. Differentiation and ‘personalised learning’ resources maximise learning [evidence]

3. Praise encourages learners and helps them persist with hard tasks [evidence]

4. Technology supports learning by engaging and motivating learners [evidence]

5. The best way to raise attainment is to enhance motivation and interest [evidence]

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Impact vs cost

Cost per pupil

Effec

t Size

(mon

ths g

ain)

£00

8

£1000

Meta-cognitive

Peer tutoringEarly Years1-1 tuitionHomework

(Secondary)

Teaching assistants

Mentoring

Summer schools After

school

AspirationsPerformance pay

Smaller classes

Setting

Most promising for raising attainment

May be worth it

Small effects /

high cost

Feedback

Phonics

Homework (Primary)

CollaborativeSmall gp

tuition Parental involvement

Individualised learning

ICT

Behaviour

Social

www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit

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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

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∂Learning happens when people have

to think hard

A better proxy for learning?

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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?

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2. Change classroom practiceInvest in effective CPD

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Improving Teaching

Teacher quality is what matters We need to focus on teacher learning Teachers learn just like other people

–Be clear what you want them to learn–Get good information about where

they are at–Give good feedback

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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

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How do we get teachers to learn hard things?

Eg Using formative

assessment Assertive

discipline How to teach

algebra

• Explain what they should do

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Intense: at least 30 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

What CPD helps students?

Do you do this?

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3. Target areas of needEvaluate teaching quality

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Why monitor teaching quality? Good evidence of (potential) benefit from

– Performance feedback (Coe, 2002)– Target setting (Locke & Latham, 2006)– Accountability (Coe & Sahlgren, 2014)

Individual teachers matter most Teachers typically stop improving after 3-5 years Everyone can improve Judging real quality/effectiveness is very hard

– Multidimensional– Not easily visible– Confounded

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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

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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?– Summative assessment includes teacher feedback

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Lesson Observation1. Two teachers observe the same lesson, one

rates it ‘Inadequate’. What is the probability the other will agree?

a) 10% b) 40% c) 60% d) 80%2. An observer judges a lesson ‘Outstanding’.

What is the probability that pupils are really making sustained, outstanding progress?

a) 5% b) 30% c) 50% d) 70%

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www.cem.org/blog

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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)

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4. Produce demonstrable benefitsEvaluate impact of changes

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A research-engaged school Draws on knowledge and understanding of

research to inform – Pedagogical practice– Decisions about strategy and policies– Attempts to implement and embed more effective

practices Robustly evaluates

– Its ongoing performance on a range of outcomes– The impact of any changes made

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Clear, well defined, replicable intervention

Good assessment of appropriate outcomes

Well-matched comparison group

EEF DIY

Evaluatio

n Guide

Key elements of good evaluation

What could

you evaluate?

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RISE: Research-leads Improving Students’ Education

With Alex Quigley, John Tomsett, Stuart Kime Based around York RCT: 20 school leaders trained in research, 20 controls Contact: [email protected]

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Summary …

1. Think hard about learning

2. Invest in good CPD3. Evaluate teaching

quality4. Evaluate impact of

[email protected]

www.cem.org

@ProfCoe