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Using evidence to raise the attainment of children facing disadvantage James Richardson Senior Analyst, Education Endowment Foundation 1 st April 2014.

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Presentation on theme: "Using evidence to raise the attainment of children facing disadvantage James Richardson Senior Analyst, Education Endowment Foundation 1 st April 2014."— Presentation transcript:

1 Using evidence to raise the attainment of children facing disadvantage James Richardson Senior Analyst, Education Endowment Foundation 1 st April 2014 james.richardson@eefoundation.org.uk www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk www.educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk @EducEndowFoundn

2 Introduction The EEF is an independent charity dedicated to breaking the link between family income and educational achievement. In 2011 the Education Endowment Foundation was set up by Sutton Trust as lead charity in partnership with the Impetus Trust. The EEF is funded by a Department for Education grant of £125m and will spend over £200m over its fifteen year lifespan. In 2013, the EEF was named with The Sutton Trust as the government-designated ‘What Works’ centre for improving education outcomes for school-aged children.

3 Key Stage 2: Top performers There are 2568 schools (31% of our data set) in which the average proportion of FSM pupils achieving Level 4 in English and Maths exceeds the national average of all pupils (79%). These are schools above the horizontal blue line in the graph. They come from across the spectrum of disadvantage (ranging from 1% FSM intake to 70%) and include schools of all types, sizes, regions, intakes etc. 3 Note: this analysis excludes independent, special and selective schools

4 There are 428 secondary schools in which the average GCSE point score of FSM pupils exceeds the national average for all pupils (276.7 points). These top performing schools come from across the spectrum of disadvantage (ranging from 1% FSM school intake to 61%). FSM pupils in schools with a low and high proportions of FSM students score higher than schools in between. 4 The imperative: Key Stage 4 top performers

5 We believe that more evidence can help… …but what does it mean for you? 2,300 schools participating in projects 502,000 pupils involved in EEF projects £220 m estimated spend over lifetime of the EEF 72 projects funded to date 5

6 The EEF approach

7 The EEF-Sutton Trust Teaching and Learning Toolkit The Toolkit is an accessible, teacher-friendly summary of educational research Practice focused: giving schools the information they need to make informed decisions and narrow the gap Based on meta-analyses provided by Durham University http://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk/toolkit/

8 A Pupil Premium Scenario – Struggling Readers What do you decide to spend the money on? How do you make the most of that investment? Number on Roll%FSMPupil Premium Allocation 30020%£78,000 Parents Class size reduction Classroom teacher One to one tuition SENCO Employ more Teaching Assistants

9 The Toolkit is a starting point for making decisions

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11 Overview of value for money Cost per pupil Effect Size (months gain) £0£0 0 10 £1000 Feedback Meta-cognitive Peer tutoring Pre-school 1-1 tutoring Homework ICT Outdoor learning Parental involvement Sports Summer schools After school Individualised learning Learning styles Arts Performance pay Teaching assistants Smaller classes Ability grouping Promising May be worth it Requires careful consideration Phonics Independent learning

12 Three rules of thumb 1. Use the evidence as a starting point for discussion 2. Dig deeper into what the evidence actually says 3. Understand the ‘active ingredients’ of implementation

13 EEF Projects We are working to fund, develop and evaluate projects that: Build on existing evidence. Will generate significant new understanding of what works. Can be replicated cost effectively if proven to work. Examples: Effective use of teaching assistants, the impact of learning to play chess, the use of iPads in schools

14 Mind the Gap Run by Campaign for Learning Trial in 40 schools Working with Year 4 pupils and parents to test the impact of a learning to learn approach 10 hours of workshops in a year Independent evaluation by National Institute for Economic and Social Research Observations and interviews to inform scale up

15 Completed EEF Projects: February 2014

16 Switch On Reading One to one programme delivered by teaching assistants over a 10 week period Delivered to Year 7 students who did not achieve Level 4 at KS2 Group Number of pupils Effect size* Estimated months’ progress All pupils308+0.24+3 Lower attainers 156+0.39+5 FSM-eligible98+0.36+4 SEN reported225+0.31+4

17 Catch Up Numeracy One to one intervention with children in Years 2 to 6 who are struggling with numeracy Two 15 minute sessions with TAs per week for 30 weeks Group Number of pupils Effect size Estimated months’ progress Catch Up Numeracy vs. control 108+0.21+3 Equivalent time one to one support vs. control 102+0.27+4

18 What have we learned? Teaching assistants, given the right support and training, can make a significant contribution to pupil attainment Schools should take care to understand how specific programmes are having an impact in their school. Implementation matters: Many educational interventions are ‘fragile’. Evaluation is critical.

19 Evidence 4 Impact Database Produced by the Institute for Effective Education, University of York. A database of widely used interventions on the evidence on their effectiveness.

20 Closing reflections Taking part in future EEF research: james.richardson@eefoundation.org.uk 2,300 schools participating in projects 502,000 pupils involved in EEF projects 72 projects funded to date


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