Visible learning

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Visible learning is a

Times Educational Supplement described Hattie's meta-study as "teaching's holy grail".[2]

Hattie compared the

Cohen's d
as a measure. He points out that in education most things work. The question is which strategies and innovations work best and where to concentrate efforts in order to improve student achievement.

Hattie found that the aspects that are most correlated with student achievement are:[1]

  1. Self-reported grades (d=1.44): correlation between self-assessment and actual grades
  2. Piagetian programs (d=1.28): correlation between
    Piagetian stage and achievement[1]
  3. Providing
    formative evaluation
    of programs
    (d=0.90)
  4. Microteaching (d=0.88)
  5. Acceleration (d=0.88)
  6. Classroom behavioral (d=0.80)
  7. Interventions for learning disabled students (d=0.77)
  8. Teacher clarity (d=0.75)
  9. Reciprocal teaching (d=0.74)
  10. Feedback (d=0.73)
  11. Teacher-student relationships (d=0.72)
  12. Spaced vs. mass practice (d=0.71)
  13. Meta-cognitive strategies (d=0.69)
  14. Prior achievement (d=0.67)
  15. Reading: vocabulary programs (d=0.67)
  16. Reading: repeated reading programs (d=0.67)

Some of the statistical methods used by Hattie have been criticised. Hattie himself admitted that the values for the

cohen's d being correct.[3][4][5]

In 2014, Rolf Schulmeister and Jörn Loviscach pointed out "considerable issues in terms of the selection of studies and the methods employed" in the meta analysis.[6] Amongst others, they criticize the use of questionable or wrongly-categorized studies and misleading or nonsensical statistics.

The phrase "visible learning" was used previously by Howard Gardner in his 2001 study "Making Learning Visible"[7] as Inez De Florio argued in 2016.[8]

References

External links