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Classroom aggregation technologies: third generation pedagogy Dylan Wiliam Institute of Education, University of London.

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Presentation on theme: "Classroom aggregation technologies: third generation pedagogy Dylan Wiliam Institute of Education, University of London."— Presentation transcript:

1 Classroom aggregation technologies: third generation pedagogy Dylan Wiliam Institute of Education, University of London

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3 ...the model that says ‘learn while you are at school the skills that you will apply during your lifetime’ is no longer tenable. These skills will be obsolete by the time you get into the workplace and need them, except for one skill – the skill of being able to learn. It is the skill of being able, not to give the right answer to questions about what you were taught in school, but to make the right response to situations that are outside the scope of what you were taught in school. We need to produce people who know how to act when they are faced with situations for which they were not specifically prepared.(Papert, 1998) What do we need students to learn?

4 Preparation for future learning (PFL)  Cannot be taught in isolation from other learning  Students still need the basic skills of literacy, numeracy, concepts and facts  Learning power is developed primarily through pedagogy, not curriculum  We have to change the way teachers teach, not what they teach

5 Successful education The test of successful education is not the amount of knowledge that a pupil takes away from school, but his [sic] appetite to know and his capacity to learn. If the school sends out children with the desire for knowledge and some idea how to acquire it, it will have done its work. Too many leave school with the appetite killed and the mind loaded with undigested lumps of information. The good schoolmaster [sic] is known by the number of valuable subjects which he declines to teach. (Sir Richard Livingstone, President of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, 1941)

6 Learning power environments  Key concept:  Teachers do not create learning  Learners create learning  Teaching as engineering learning environments  Key features:  Create student engagement (pedagogies of engagement)  Well-regulated (pedagogies of contingency)

7 Why pedagogies of engagement?  Intelligence is partly inherited  So what?  Intelligence is partly environmental  Environment creates intelligence  Intelligence creates environment  Learning environments  High cognitive demand  Inclusive  Obligatory

8 Motivation: cause or effect? competence challenge Flow apathy boredom relaxation arousal anxiety worry control high low high (Csikszentmihalyi, 1990)

9 Why pedagogies of contingency?  For evaluating institutions  For describing individuals  For supporting learning  Monitoring learning  Whether learning is taking place  Diagnosing (informing) learning  What is not being learnt  Forming learning  What to do about it

10 Effects of formative assessment  Several major reviews of the research  Natriello (1987)  Crooks (1988)  Kluger & DeNisi (1996)  Black & Wiliam (1998)  Nyquist (2003)  All find consistent, substantial effects

11 Cost/effect comparisons InterventionExtra learning Cost/yr/ classroom Class-size reduction (by 30%)20%£20k Increase teacher content knowledge by 1 sd 5%? Formative assessment/ Assessment for learning 75%£2k

12 Three generations of pedagogy  First generation  Traditional pedagogy  Second generation  All student response systems  Third generation  Automated aggregation technologies

13 Five-process architecture  Task selection  Task presentation  Evidence elicitation  Evidence identification  Evidence accumulation After Almond, Steinberg and Mislevy (2002)

14 Evidence elicitation  Single student response systems  All-student response systems  Flash-cards/dry erase boards  Classroom ‘clickers’  Traditional keyboards (wired/wireless)  Anoto pens

15 Anoto pen  Wireless pen  Special coated paper  Pen ‘knows where it is’

16 Palm with wireless keyboard  Text-based input  Limited task-presentation capability  Portable

17 Classroom ‘clickers’

18 Wilson & Draney, 2004 Questioning in science: diagnosis The ball sitting on the table is not moving. It is not moving because: A. no forces are pushing or pulling on the ball. B. gravity is pulling down, but the table is in the way. C. the table pushes up with the same force that gravity pulls down D. gravity is holding it onto the table. E. there is a force inside the ball keeping it from rolling off the table

19 Questioning in math: diagnosis In which of these right triangles is a 2 + b 2 = c 2 ? A a c b C b c a E c b a B a b c D b a c F c a b

20 Discourse ® www.ets.org/discourse

21 Evidence capture  Automated essay scoring (e-rater)  Paraphrase analysers (c-rater)  Graphical analysers (m-rater)

22 All-student response systems unstructuredstructured evidence structure teacher- mediated automated clickers aggregationABCD cards dry-erase boards c-rater Discourse ® latent semantic analysis

23 Evidence accumulation  Unidimensional student models  Bayesian inference networks  Proficiency model  Task model  Evidence model  Student model

24 Evidence utilization  Whole-class  Sub-groups  Homogenous  Heterogenous  Individualization


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