Hattie Chapter 7
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Transcript of Hattie Chapter 7
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The Contributions from the TeacherChapter 7 of Visible Learning: a Synthesis of Meta-Analyses Relating to Achievement by John A. C. Hattie (2009)
+“Not all teachers are effective, not all teachers are experts, and not all teachers have powerful effects on students”(Hattie, 2009, p. 108)
+The Contributions from the Teacher
This powerpoint is broken down into 6 sections, just as Hattie (2009) breaks down chapter 7.
Contributions of the Teacher Training Programs
Teacher Subject Matter Knowledge
The Importance of the Quality of Teaching
The Quality of the Teacher-Student Relationships
Professional Development
Teacher Expectations
The Contributions from the Teacher Sections
+Contributions of the Teacher Training Programs“It seems surprising that the education of new teachers seems so data-free; maybe this is where future teachers learn how to ignore evidence, emphasize craft, and look for positive evidence that they are making a difference (somewhere, somehow, with someone!).” (Hattie, 2009, p. 110)
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Contributions from Teacher Training Programs
Is there a standard approach to teacher training? Teacher education institutions claim
there is Reality: their claim is false
New National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education (NCATE) model (2000) Colleges required to provide:
Graduating standards Evidence that graduates met the
standards Accountability is key!
Sad reality Extreme lack of data regarding
teacher training The effect size of teacher education is
0.11 (an effect size of .40 or above is desired) Teacher training programs make
SOME difference, but there is room for improvement
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Contributions of Teacher Training Programs
Student teachers enter teacher training programs with a bed of ‘knowledge’ Student teachers need to be ‘de-educated’
Necessary transformation from student to instructor
Conceptions need to be confronted School subjects > facts and rules Teaching > personal craft and common
sense
Most teacher programs Focus on training low-level skills Reinforce skills the student teacher has
already mastered Provide too little exposure to/teaching of
new conceptions/ways of teaching
Evidence supports programs that teach (over time in many sessions rather than all at once) Theory Demonstration Practice Feedback and coaching
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Contributions from Teacher Training Programs
According to Hattie (2009), Teacher training programs should Build teacher conceptions
Teaching Learning Assessment Curriculum Students How the above influence a working
classroom, student progression and teaching
Prepare teachers for Larger class sizes Busy curricula Questioning themselves
Expectations Evaluate effectiveness of their
teaching Appreciating/understanding the need
to talk to other teachers about teaching
Seeing learning through students’ eyes
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Contributions from Teacher Training Programs
According to Darling-Hammond (2006) the 7 features of exemplary teacher education programs are
1. Coherence based on a common, clear vision of good teaching that permeates all coursework and clinical experiences
2. Well-defined standards of practice and performance that guide and evaluate coursework and clinical work
3. Curriculum grounded in knowledge of child and adolescent development, learning, social contexts, and subject matter pedagogy
7 Features of Exemplary Teacher Education Programs (Darling-Hammond, 2006)
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Contributions of Teacher Training Programs
4. Extended clinical experiences carefully developed to support the ideas and practices presented in simultaneous closely interwoven coursework
5. Explicit strategies to help student teachers to confront their own deep-seated beliefs and assumptions about learning
6. Strong relationships, common knowledge, and shared beliefs that link all who are teaching these prospective teachers
7. Assessment based on professional standards that evaluates teaching through demonstrations of critical skills and abilities using performance assessment and portfolios
7 Features of Exemplary Teacher Education Programs (Darling-Hammond, 2006) cont.
+Teacher Subject Matter Knowledge“There has been a long debate about the importance of teacher subject matter knowledge, with the seemingly obvious claim that teachers need to know their subject to teach it!” (Hattie, 2009, p. 113)
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Teacher Subject Matter Knowledge
Lack of data to defend teacher need to understand subject matter in order to teach it Arguments that subject matter
knowledge influences student achievement until basic competence Influence wanes after basic
competence is achieved
From data available Low effect size (0.12 for
mathematics, 0.09 overall) between knowing material and student outcomes
Positive association with teachers’ verbal ability and student outcomes
Teachers’ academic skills positively influence student achievement in half of the studies analyzed Intellectual ability may be more
powerful than teacher training
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Teacher Subject Matter Knowledge
Teacher ‘s are most effective when they possess Knowledge
Subject matter knowledge Knowledge of teaching
strategies and best-practices (and evidence-based practices)
Empathy Ability to develop interpersonal
relationships with students Positive attitudes and self-
concept Verbal ability
“They are greater than the sum of the parts and if one is missing the effectiveness is reduces by more than a third” (Hattie, 2009).
+The Importance of the Quality of Teaching“A key is not whether teachers are excellent, or even seen to be excellent by colleagues, but whether they are excellent as seen by students—the students sit in the classes, they known whether the teacher sees learning through their eyes, and they know the quality of the relationship.” (Hattie, 2009, p. 116)
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The Importance of the Quality of Teaching
Quality of teaching has an effect size of 0.44
Quality teachers Challenge students Have higher expectations Monitor and evaluate students Teach the language, love, and
details Encourage the study of their subject Value surface and deep knowledge Student achievement gains of
roughly 52% a year
Least effective teachers Student achievement gains of
roughly 14% a yea Residual negative effects on student
achievement for years after having a poor quality teacher
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The Importance of the Quality of Teaching
Student evaluations/Student feedback Accurate reports on the quality of
teaching Studies show they are reliable,
trustworthy, and valid Argument they are popularity
contests Tool for teachers to learn from
Can help teachers to better understand what learning looks and feels like for their students
Many do not use them despite contributions to student achievement (college level effect size of 0.38)
Lack of use in elementary and high schools Can benefit, if used
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The Importance of the Quality of Teaching
National Board for Professional Teaching Standards Accurate method of determining the
quality of teaching To get certified
Teachers sit through a series of assessments (6 months or more)
Adjudged certified as an accomplished teacher
0.47 effect size in the promotion of learning by teachers
0.48 effect size of certified teachers advancing student learning
National Board Certified Teachers Set appropriately challenging goals Challenge students to think Regularly promote varied and
appropriate assignments that are demanding and engaging
High effect on deep understanding Low effect on achievement on state tests
+The Quality of the Teacher-Student Relationships“Most students who do not wish to come to school or who dislike school do so primarily because they dislike their teacher…to improve teacher-student relationships and reap their benefits, teachers should learn to…[demonstrate] that they care for the learning of each student as a person” (Hattie, 2009, p.119)
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The Quality of the Teacher-Student Relationships
Building positive relations with students requires Agency Efficacy Respect by the teacher for what
the child brings to the class From home From their culture From their peers
Allowing experiences to be recognized in the classroom
Skills required by the teacher Listening Empathy Caring Positive regard for others
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The Quality of the Teacher-Student Relationships
Person-centered teacher variables affect all student outcomes Teacher-student relationships have
an effect size of 0.72
Classes with person-centered teachers have More engagement More respect of self and others Fewer resistant behaviors More student initiated and regulated
activities Higher achievement
According to Cornelius-White (2007), students in person-centered classrooms Have valuable feedback to self-
assess Feel safe Learn to understand others and the
content with interest and concern
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Professional Development“One of the difficulties with reviews of professional development is that the outcomes seem to be more about changes in the teachers, and not the impact of professional development on student outcomes.” (Hattie, 2009, p.119)
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Professional Development
Outcomes of professional development according to Wade (1985)
1. Reaction—how the teachers felt about the professional development
2. Learning—the amount of learning the teachers accrued
3. Behavior—whether teachers changed their behavior as a result of the professional development
4. Student outcomes—impact on students
Overall effect size of 0.62
Effect size of 0.90 on teacher learning
Effect size of 0.60 on teacher behavior
Effect size of 0.42 on reactions to professional development
Effect size of 0.37 on influence on student learning
Effect size of 0.66 on academic outcomes
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Professional Development
Most effective on teacher knowledge/behavior Observation of actual methods Microteaching Video/audio feedback Practice
Most effective when Elementary and high school teachers
are trained together Funded or developed by federal, state,
government, or university rather than by schools or teachers
Participants are selected for training Training are practical rather than
theoretical
Least effective on teacher knowledge/behavior Discussion Lectures Games/simulations Guided field trips
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Professional Development
Seven themes about what works best in professional development according to Timperley and colleagues
1. Learning opportunities are extended over a long period of time
2. External experts are involved
3. Teachers are actively engaged
4. Student achievement is the main focus; current conceptions about learning are challenged and teachers are challenged to teach more effectively
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Professional Development
5. Teachers work together to challenge problematic misconceptions and discuss the truth behind different ideas. These discussions are most effective when they have the ultimate goal of improving student achievement.
6. It is more effective when supported by school leadership personnel, when opportunities to learn and process new information are provided and when there is open access to relevant expertise.
7. Funding, mandatory vs. voluntary participation, and release time are irrelevant factors to student achievement.
7 themes about what works best in professional development cont.
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Teacher Expectations“If teachers and schools are going to have expectations, make them challenging, appropriate, and checkable such that all students are achieving what is deemed valuable.” (Hattie, 2009, p.124)
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Teacher Expectations
Powerful influence on success of student learning
Input factors are the most significant determiner of expectancies Gender Age Ethnicity
When information about ability, achievement and behavior is provided, teacher expectations mirror the information
Students know they are treated differently based on expectations held of them
Generally, if there are low expectations for student achievement, expectations are low for all students
Teachers should “be prepared to be surprised” by their students
+“While the message from this chapter is about the power of teachers, it is teachers using particular teaching methods, teachers with high expectations for all students, and teachers who have created positive student-teacher relationships that are more likely to have the above average effects on student achievement.”(Hattie, 2009, p. 126)
+References Cornelius-White, J. (2007). Learner-centered teacher-student
relationships are effective: A meta-analysis. Review of Educational Research, 77(1), 113-143.
Darling-Hammond, L. (2006). Constructing 21st-century teacher education. Journal of Teacher Education, 57(3), 300-314.
Hattie, J. A. (2009). Visible learning: A synthesis of over 800 meta-analyses relating to achievement. London: Routledge.
Kennedy, M. M. (1997). Defining an ideal teacher education program. Paper for the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. Michigan Sate University.
Timperley, H., Wilson, A., Barrar, H., & Fung, I. Y. Y. (2007). Teacher professional learning and development: Best evidence synthesis iteration In. Wellington, New Zealand: Ministry of Education.
Wade, R. K. (1985). What makes a difference in inservice teacher education? A meta-analysis of research. Educational Leadership, 42(4), 48-54.