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Wikipedia

Evidence-based education

Evidence-based education (EBE) is the principle that education practices should be based on the best available scientific evidence, rather than tradition, personal judgement, or other influences.[1] Evidence-based education is related to evidence-based teaching,[2][3][4] evidence-based learning,[5] and school effectiveness research.[6][7] For example, research has shown that spaced repetition (also spaced training, spacing effect and spaced learning) "leads to more robust memory formation than massed training does, which involves short or no intervals".[8][9][10]

The evidence-based education movement has its roots in the larger movement towards evidence-based practices, and has been the subject of considerable debate since the late 1990s.[11] However, research published in 2020 showed that there is still widespread belief, amongst educators in ineffective teaching techniques such as matching instruction to a few supposed learning styles[12] and the cone of learning.[13]

Research design and evidence

History Edit

The English author and academic David H. Hargreaves presented a lecture in 1996 in which he stated "Teaching is not at present a research-based profession. I have no doubt that if it were it would be more effective and satisfying". He compared the fields of medicine and teaching, saying that physicians are expected to keep up to date on medical research, whereas many teachers may not even be aware of the importance of research to their profession. In order for teaching to become more research-based, he suggested, educational research would require a "radical change" and teachers would have to become more involved in the creation and application of research.[14]

Following that lecture, English policy makers in education tried to bring theory and practice closer together. At the same time, existing education research faced criticism for its quality, reliability, impartiality and accessibility.[15]

In 2000 and 2001 two international, evidence-based, studies were created to analyze and report on the effectiveness of school education throughout the world: the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) in 2000 and the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) in 2001.

Also, around the same time three major evidence-based studies about reading were released highlighting the value of evidence in education: the US National Reading Panel in 2000, the Australian report on Teaching reading in 2005,[16] and the Independent review of the teaching of early reading (Rose Report 2006), England. Approximately a year before the Rose Report, the Scottish Executive Education Department (SEED) published the results of a study entitled A Seven Year Study of the Effects of Synthetic Phonics Teaching on Reading and Spelling Attainment (Clackmannanshire Report), comparing synthetic phonics with analytic phonics.[17]

Scientifically based research (SBR)[18] (also evidence-based practice in education) first appeared in United States Federal legislation in the Reading Excellence Act[19] and subsequently in the Comprehensive School Reform program.[20] However, it came into prominence in the U.S. under the No child left behind act of 2001 (NCLB), intended to help students in kindergarten through grade 3 who are reading below grade level. Federal funding was made available for education programs and teacher training that are "based on scientifically based reading research".[21] NCLB was replaced in 2015 by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).[22]

In 2002 the U.S. Department of Education founded the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) to provide scientific evidence to guide education practice and policy.

The State driven Common Core State Standards Initiative was developed in the United States in 2009 in an attempt to standardize education principles and practices.[23] There appears to have been some attempt to incorporate evidence-based practices. For example, the core standards website has a comprehensive description of the specific details of the English Language Arts Standards that include the areas of the alphabetic principle, print concepts, phonological awareness, phonics and word recognition, and fluency.[24] However, it is up to the individual States and school districts to develop plans to implement the standards, and the National Governors Guide to Early Literacy appears to lack details.[25] As of 2020, 41 States had adopted the standards, and in most cases it has taken three or more years to have them implemented.[26] For example, Wisconsin adopted the standards in 2010 and implemented them in the 2014–2015 school year, yet in 2020 the state Department of Public Instruction was in the process of developing materials to support the standards in teaching phonics.[27][28]

According to reports, the Common Core State Standards Initiative does not appear to have led to a significant national improvement in students' performance.[29] The Center on Standards, Alignment, Instruction, and Learning (C-SAIL)[30] conducted a study of how the Common Core is received in schools. It reported these findings: a) there is moderately high buy-in for the standards among teachers, principals, and superintendents, but buy-in was significantly lower for teachers, b) there is wide variation in teachers' alignment to the standards by content area and grade level, c) specificity is desired by some educators, however states and districts are reluctant to provide too much specificity, d) State officials generally agree that accountability changes under ESSA have allowed them to adopt a "smart power" message that is less punitive and more supportive.[31][32]

Subsequently, in England the Education Endowment Foundation of London was established in 2011 by The Sutton Trust, as the lead charity of the government-designated What Works Centre for high quality evidence in UK Education.[33][34]

In 2012 the Department for Education in England introduced an evidence-based "phonics reading check" to help support primary students with reading. (In 2016, the Minister for Education reported that the percentage of primary students not meeting reading expectations reduced from 33% in 2010 to 20% in 2016.)[35]

Evidence-based education in England received a boost from the 2013 briefing paper by Dr. Ben Goldacre. It advocated for systemic change and more randomized controlled trials to assess the effects of educational interventions. He said this was not about telling teachers what to do, but rather "empowering teachers to make independent, informed decisions about what works".[36] Following that a U.K. based non-profit, researchED, was founded to offer a forum for researchers and educationalists to discuss the role of evidence in education.[37]

Discussion and criticism ensued. Some said research methods that are useful in medicine can be entirely inappropriate in the sphere of education.[38]

In 2014 the National Foundation for Educational Research, Berkshire, England[39] published a report entitled Using Evidence in the Classroom: What Works and Why.[40] The review synthesises effective approaches to school and teacher engagement with evidence and discusses challenges, areas for attention and action. It is intended to help the teaching profession to make the best use of evidence about what works in improving educational outcomes.

In 2014 the British Educational Research Association (BERA) and the Royal Society of Arts (RSA) conducted an inquiry into the role of research in teacher education in England, Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The final report made it clear that research and teacher inquiry were of paramount importance in developing self-improving schools. It advocated for a closer working partnership between teacher-researchers and the wider academic research community.[41][42]

The 2015 Carter Review of Initial Teaching Training in the UK[43] suggested that teacher trainees should have access and skills in using research evidence to support their teaching. However, they do not receive training in utilizing research.

NCLB in the US was replaced in 2015 by the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) that replaced "scientifically based research" with "evidence-based interventions" (any "activity, strategy, or intervention that shows a statistically significant effect on improving student outcomes or other relevant outcomes").[44] ESSA has four tiers of evidence that some say gives schools and policy makers greater control because they can choose the desired tier of evidence.[45] The evidence tiers are as follows:

  • Tier 1 – Strong Evidence: supported by one or more well-designed and well-implemented randomized controlled experimental studies.
  • Tier 2 – Moderate Evidence: supported by one or more well-designed and well-implemented quasi-experimental studies.
  • Tier 3 – Promising Evidence: supported by one or more well-designed and well-implemented correlational studies (with statistical controls for selection bias).
  • Tier 4 – Demonstrates a Rationale: practices that have a well-defined logic model or theory of action, are supported by research, and have some effort underway by state educational agencies (SEA), local educational agencies (LEA), or outside research organization to determine their effectiveness.[46][47]

In 2016 the Department for Education in England published the White Paper Educational Excellence Everywhere. It states its intention to support an evidence-informed teaching profession by increasing teachers' access to and use of "high quality evidence". It will also establish a new British education journal and expand the Education Endowment Foundation.[48] In addition, on October 4, 2016, the Government announced an investment of around £75 million in the Teaching and Leadership Innovation Fund, to support high-quality, evidence-informed, professional development for teachers and school leaders. A research report in July 2017 entitled Evidence-informed teaching: an evaluation of progress in England[49] concluded this was necessary, but not sufficient. It said that the main challenge for policy makers and researchers was the level of leadership capacity and commitment to make it happen. In other words, the attitudes and actions of school leaders influence how classroom teachers are supported and held accountable for using evidence informed practices.

In 2017 the British Educational Research Association (BERA) examined the role of universities in professional development, focusing especially on teacher education and medical education.[50]

Critics continue, saying "Education research is great but never forget teaching is a complex art form."[51] In 2018, Dylan Wiliam, Emeritus Professor of Educational Assessment at University College London, speaking at researchED stated that "Educational research will never tell teachers what to do; their classrooms are too complex for this ever to be possible." Instead, he suggests, teachers should become critical users of educational research and "aware of when even well-established research findings are likely to fail to apply in a particular setting".[52]

Reception Edit

Acceptance Edit

Since many educators and policy makers are not experienced in evaluating scientific studies and studies have found that "teachers' beliefs are often guided by subjective experience rather than by empirical data",[53][54] several non-profit organizations have been created to critically evaluate research studies and provide their analysis in a user-friendly manner. They are outlined in research sources and information.

EBP has not been readily adopted in all parts of the education field, leading some to suggest the K-12 teaching profession has suffered a loss of respect because of its science-aversive culture and failure to adopt empirical research as the major determinant of its practices.[55][56][57] Speaking in 2017, Harvey Bischof, Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation (OSSTF), said there is a need for teacher-centred education based upon what works in the classroom. He suggested that Ontario education "lacks a culture of empiricism" and is vulnerable to gurus, ideologues and advocates promoting unproven trends and fads.[58]

Neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg, University of Wisconsin–Madison, stated that "A stronger scientific ethos (in education) could have provided a much needed defense against bad science", particularly in the field of early reading instruction.[59] Other influential researchers in psychopedagogy, cognitive science and neuroscience, such as Stanislas Dehaene[60] and Michel Fayol have also supported the view of incorporating science into educational practices.

Critics and skeptics Edit

Skeptics point out that EBP in medicine often produces conflicting results.[61] Others feel that EBE "limits the opportunities for educational professionals to exert their judgment about what is educationally desirable in particular situations".[62]

Some suggest teachers should not pick up research findings and implement them directly into the classroom; instead they advocate for a modified approach some call evidence-informed teaching that combines research with other types of evidence plus personal experience and good judgement; "practice that is influenced by robust research evidence".[63] [64]

Others say there is "a mutual interdependence between science and education", and teachers should become better trained in research science and "take science sufficiently seriously" to see how its methods might inform their practice.[65]Straight talk on evidence has suggested that[66] reports about evidence in education need to be scrutinized for accuracy or subjected to Metascience (research on research).[67]

In a 2020 talk featured on ResearchED, Dylan Wiliam argues that when looking at the cost, benefit and practicality of research, more impact on student achievement will come from a knowledge-rich curriculum[68] and improving teachers' pedagogical skills.[69]

Philosophical concerns Edit

Some of the criticisms about evidence-based approaches to education relate to concerns about the generalisability of educational research, specifically that research findings are context dependent and that it is difficult to generalise findings from one context to another using a positivist approach.[70] Counter to this position is a view that education researchers have a responsibility to consider the practical value of their research.[71]

There has also been some discussion of a philosophical nature about the validity of scientific evidence. This led James M. Kauffman, University of Virginia, and Gary M. Sasso, University of Iowa, to respond in 2006 suggesting that problems arise with the extreme views of a) the "unbound faith in science" (i.e. scientism) or b) the "criticism of science" (that they label as the "nonsense of postmodernism"). They go on to say that science is "the imperfect but best tool available for trying to reduce uncertainty about what we do as special educators".[72]

Meta-analysis Edit

A meta-analysis is a statistical analysis that combines the results of multiple scientific studies. A concern of some researchers is the unreliability of some of these reports due to mythological features. For example, it is suggested that some meta-analyses findings are not credible because they do not exclude or control for studies with small sample sizes or very short durations, and where the researchers are doing the measurements. Such reports can yield "implausible" results. According to Robert Slavin, of the Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University and Evidence for ESSA,[73] "Meta-analyses are important, because they are widely read and widely cited, in comparison to individual studies. Yet until meta-analyses start consistently excluding, or at least controlling for studies with factors known to inflate mean effect sizes, then they will have little if any meaning for practice."[74][75][76]

Research sources and information Edit

The following organizations evaluate research on educational programs, or help educators to understand the research.

Best Evidence Encyclopedia (BEE) Edit

Best Evidence Encyclopedia (BEE) is a free website created by the Johns Hopkins University School of Education's Center for Data-Driven Reform in Education (established in 2004) and is funded by the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education.[77] It gives educators and researchers reviews about the strength of the evidence supporting a variety of English programs available for students in grades K–12. The reviews cover programs in areas such as mathematics, reading, writing, science, comprehensive school reform, and early childhood education; and includes such topics as effectiveness of technology and struggling readers.

BEE selects reviews that meet consistent scientific standards and relate to programs that are available to educators.[78]

Educational programs in the reviews are rated according to the overall strength of the evidence supporting their effects on students as determined by the combination the quality of the research design and their effect size. The BEE website contains an explanation of their interpretation of effect size and how it might be viewed as a percentile score. It uses the following categories of ratings:

  • Strong evidence of effectiveness
  • Moderate evidence of effectiveness
  • Limited evidence of effectiveness: Strong evidence of modest effects
  • Limited evidence of effectiveness: Weak evidence with notable effect
  • No qualifying studies

Reading programs Edit

In 2021, BEE released a review of research on 61 studies of 51 different programs for struggling readers in elementary schools. 84% were randomized experiments and 16% quasi-experiments.[79] The vast majority were done in the US, the programs are replicable, and the studies, done between 1990 and 2018, had a minimum duration of 12 weeks. Many of the programs used phonics-based teaching and/or one or more of the following: cooperative learning, technology-supported adaptive instruction (see Educational technology), metacognitive skills, phonemic awareness, word reading, fluency, vocabulary, multisensory learning, spelling, guided reading, reading comprehension, word analysis, structured curriculum, and balanced literacy (non-phonetic approach). Significantly, table 5 (pg. 88) shows the mean weighted effect sizes of the programs by the manner in which they were conducted (i.e. by school, by classroom, by technology-supported adaptive instruction, by one-to-small-group tutoring, and by one-to-one tutoring).[80] Table 8 (pg. 91) lists the 22 programs meeting ESSA standards for strong and moderate ratings, and their effect size.

The review concludes that a) outcomes were positive for one-to-one tutoring, b) outcomes were positive but not as large for one-to-small group tutoring, c) there were no differences in outcomes between teachers and teaching assistants as tutors, d) technology-supported adaptive instruction did not have positive outcomes, e) whole-class approaches (mostly cooperative learning) and whole-school approaches incorporating tutoring obtained outcomes for struggling readers as large as those found for one- to-one tutoring, and benefitted many more students, and f) approaches mixing classroom and school improvements, with tutoring for the most at-risk students, have the greatest potential for the largest numbers of struggling readers.

The site also offers a newsletter,[81] originated by Robert Slavin the former Director of the Center for Research and Reform in Education,[82] containing information on education around the world. The issue for January 28, 2021 has a chart showing that proven tutoring programs during the regular school year are significantly more effective than other approaches such as summer school (without tutoring), after school, extended-day, and technology.[83] The February 11, 2021 issue makes a case for using Federal Government COVID-19 funding (the Learning Recovery Act) to provide for the "implementation of proven tutoring programs during ordinary school times".[84]

Blueprints for healthy youth development Edit

Blueprints for Healthy Youth Development, University of Colorado Boulder, offers a registry of evidence-based interventions with "the strongest scientific support" that are effective in promoting a healthy course of action for youth development.[85]

Education Endowment Foundation Edit

The Education Endowment Foundation of London, England was established in 2011 by The Sutton Trust, as a lead charity in partnership with Impetus Trust, together being the government-designated What Works Centre for UK Education.[33] It offers an online, downloadable Teaching & Learning Toolkit evaluating and describing a variety of educational interventions according to cost, evidence and impact.[86] As an example, it evaluates and describes a 2018 phonics reading program with low cost, extensive evidence and moderate impact.[87]

Evidence for ESSA Edit

Evidence for ESSA[88] began in 2017 and is produced by the Center for Research and Reform in Education (CRRE)[89] at Johns Hopkins University School of Education, Baltimore, MD. It is reported to have received "widespread support ",[90] and offers free up-to-date information on current PK-12 programs in reading, math, social-emotional learning, and attendance that meet the standards of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) (the United States K–12 public education policy signed by President Obama in 2015).[91] It also provides information on programs that do meet ESSA standards as well as those that do not.[92]

Evidence-based PK-12 programs Edit

There are three program categories[93] 1) whole class, 2) struggling readers and 3) English learners. Programs can be filtered by a) ESSA evidence rating (strong, moderate, and promising), b) school grade, c) community (rural, suburban, urban), d) groups (African American, Asian American, Hispanic, White, free and reduced price lunch, English learners, and special education), and e) a variety of features such as cooperative learning, technology, tutoring, etc.

For example, as of June 2020 there were 89 reading programs in the database. After filtering for strong results, grades 1–2, and free and reduced-price lunches, 23 programs remain.[94] If it is also filter for struggling readers, the list is narrowed to 14 programs.[95] The resulting list is shown by the ESSA ratings, Strong, Moderate or Promising. Each program can then be evaluated according to the following: number of studies, number of students, average effect size, ESSA rating, cost, program description, outcomes, and requirements for implementation.

Social programs that work and Straight Talk on Evidence Edit

Social programs that work[96] and Straight Talk on Evidence[97] are administered by the Arnold Ventures LLC's[98] evidence-based policy team, with offices in Houston, Washington, D.C., and New York City. The team is composed of the former leadership of the Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy, a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization advocating the use of well-conducted randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in policy decisions. It offers information on twelve types of social programs including education.

Social programs that work evaluates programs according to their RCTs and gives them one of three ratings:

  • Top Tier: Programs with two or more replicable and well conducted RCTs (or one multi-site RTC), in a typical community settings producing sizable sustained outcomes.
  • Near Top Tier: Programs that meet almost all elements of the Top Tier standard but need another replication RCT to confirm the initial findings.
  • Suggestive Tier: Programs appearing to be a strong candidate with some shortcomings. They produce sizeable positive effects based on one or more well conducted RCTs (or studies that almost meet this standard); however, the evidence is limited by factors such as short-term follow-up or effects that are not statistically significant.

Education programs include K-12 and postsecondary. The programs are listed under each category according to their rating and the update date is shown. For example, as of June 2020 there were 12 programs under K-12; two were Top Tier, five were Near Top Tier, and the remainder were Suggestive Tier. Each program contains information about the program, evaluation methods, key findings and other data such as the cost per student. Beyond the general category, there does not appear to be any way to filter for only the type of program of interest, however the list may not be especially long.

Straight Talk on Evidence seeks to distinguish between programs that only claim to be effective and other programs showing credible findings of being effective.[99][100] It reports mostly on randomized controlled trial (RCT) evaluations, recognizing that RCTs offer no guarantee that the study was implemented well, or that its reported results represented the true findings. The lead author of a study is given an opportunity to respond to their report prior to its publication.

What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) Edit

What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) of Washington, DC,[101] was established in 2002 and evaluates numerous educational programs in twelve categories by the quality and quantity of the evidence and the effectiveness. It is operated by the federal National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance (NCEE), part of the Institute of Education Sciences (IES)[102]

Publications Edit

WWC publications are available for a variety of topics (e.g. literacy, charter schools, science, early childhood, etc.) and Type (i.e. Practice guide or Intervention report).[103]

Practice guides, tutorials, videos and webinars Edit

Practice guides with recommendations are provided covering a wide variety of subjects such as Using Technology to Support Postsecondary Student Learning and Assisting Students Struggling with Reading, etc.[104] Other resources such as tutorials, videos and webinars are also available.[105]

Reviews of individual studies Edit

Individual studies are available that have been reviewed by WWC and categorized according to the evidence tiers of the United States Every student succeeds act (ESSA).[106] Search filters are available for the following:

  • WWC ratings (e.g. meets WWC standards with or without reservations, meets WWC standards without reservations, etc.)
  • Topic (e.g. behavior, charter schools, etc.)
  • Studies meeting certain design standards (e.g. Randomized controlled trial, Quasi-experiment design, etc.)
  • ESSA ratings (e.g. ESSA Tier 1, ESSA Tier 2, etc.)
  • Studies with one or more statistically positive findings

Intervention reports, programs and search filters Edit

Intervention reports are provided for programs according to twelve topics (e.g. literacy, mathematics, science, behavior, etc.).[107]

The filters are helpful to find programs that meet specific criteria. For example, as of July 2020 there were 231 literacy programs in the WWC database. (Note: these are literacy programs that may have several individual trials and some of the trials were conducted as early as 2006.) If these programs are filtered for outcomes in Literacy-Alphabetics the list is narrowed to 25 programs that met WWC standards for evidence and had at least one "potentially positive" effectiveness rating. If the list is further filtered to show only programs in grades one or two, and delivery methods of individual, or small group, or whole class the list is down to 14 programs; and five of those have an effectiveness rating of "strong evidence that intervention had a positive effect on outcomes" in alphabetics.[108]

The resulting list of programs can then be sorted by a) evidence of effectiveness, or b) alphabetically, or c) school grades examined. It is also possible to select individual programs to be compared with each other; however it is advisable to recheck each individual program by searching on the Intervention Reports page.[109] The resulting programs show data in the following areas:

  • outcome domain (e.g. alphabetics, oral language, general mathematics achievement, etc.)
  • effectiveness rating (e.g. positive, potentially positive, mixed, etc.)
  • number of studies meeting WWC standards
  • grades examined (e.g. K-4)
  • number of students in studies that met the WWC standards, and
  • improvement index (i.e. the expected change in percentile rank).

It is also possible to view the program's Evidence snapshot, detailed Intervention report and Review protocols. For other independent "related reviews", go to the evidence snapshot then the WWC Summary of Evidence.

The following chart, updated in July 2020, shows some programs that had "strong evidence" of a "positive effect on outcomes" in the areas specified. The results may have changed since that time, however current information is available on the WWC website, including the outcome domains that did not have "strong evidence".

Program Intervention Description Grades Improvement area and expected change in percentile rank
Success for All In kindergarten through first grade, teachers read aloud and discuss with students focusing on phonemic awareness, auditory discrimination, and sound blending. In the second through fifth grades cooperative learning activities built around partner reading are used. It is delivered with daily 90-minute reading classes consisting of 15–20 students, grouped by performance and regardless of their age. One-on-one tutoring is provided to students with learning difficulties. K-4 Alphabetics (+9%)
READ 180 A reading program for those that are two or more grades years below grade level. The classes start off with whole-class instructions, which is followed by computer practices that are adaptive and individualized, small group activities or independent reading, with a whole-class wrap up in the end of the class. 4–10 Comprehension (+6%) and general literacy achievement (+4%)
Phonological Awareness Training Activities where children identify, detect, delete, segment, or blend segments of spoken words (i.e., words, syllables, onsets and rimes, phonemes) or that focus on teaching children to detect, identify, or produce rhyme or alliteration. PK Phonological processing (+27%)
Phonological Awareness Training plus Letter Knowledge Training The added letter knowledge training component includes teaching children the letters of the alphabet and making an explicit link between letters and sounds. PK Phonological processing (+30%), Print knowledge(+27)
Reading recovery Daily 30 minute one-on-one tutoring sessions to students who have difficulties in reading and writing over the course of 12–20 weeks. 1 Alphabetics (+21%), Reading achievement (+27)
Instructional Conversations and Literature Logs Program for English learners where teachers engage students to Instructional Conversations, where stories or personal experiences are discussed with teachers acting as facilitators. Literature Logs require students to respond in writing to prompts or questions. Responses are then shared in small groups or with a partner. 2–5 Reading achievement (+29%)
SpellRead Literacy program for struggling readers, including special education students and English language learners. SpellRead breaks the recognizing and manipulating of English sounds into specific skills, and focuses on mastering each skill through systematic and explicit instruction. 5–6 Alphabetics (+18%)
Dialogic Reading Shared picture book reading practice where the adult and the child switch roles so that the child learns to become the storyteller with the assistance of the adult, who functions as an active listener and questioner. PK Oral language (+19%)
DaisyQuest Computer-assisted instruction with a storyline and practices that teach children how to recognize words that rhyme; words that have the same beginning, middle, and ending sounds, words that can be formed from a series of phonemes presented separately and also teaches children how to count the number of sounds in words. PK–1 Alphabetics (+23%)
Earobics Interactive software that provides individual instruction for phonemic awareness, auditory processing, and phonics, as well as the cognitive and language skills required for comprehension. Each level of instruction addresses recognizing and blending sounds, rhyming, and discriminating phonemes. The software is supported by audio, video and reading materials. 3 Alphabetics (+19%)
Stepping Stones to Literacy The program includes serial rapid automatic naming activities where children practice making quick visual-verbal associations of known sets of colors, numbers, and/or letter names in a left-to-right format, and instructional prompts in English and Spanish. 3 Alphabetics (+30%)
Teach For America Placing non-traditionally trained teachers in high-need public schools. Many TFA teachers hold bachelor's degrees from selective colleges and universities. 12 Mathematics Achievement (+4%)
Caring School Community (CSC) Program consists of class meeting lessons, cross-age "buddies" programs, "homeside" activities, and creation of schoolwide community by bringing school staff, parents and students together to create new school traditions. 6 Behavior (+8%), Knowledge, attitudes, and values (+7%)
First Step to Success Program seeks to detect children who at risk to develop antisocial behavior patterns and match them with behavior coaches who work with the child, his or her classpeers and parents for approximately 50–60 hours over a 3-month period. 3 External behavior (+28%)
Dual Enrollment Programs The intervention allows high school students to take college courses and earn college credits while still attending high school. 9–12 Access and enrollment (+15), Attainment (+25), Completing school (+7), Credit accumulation (+14), General academic achievement – high school (+7)
Check & Connect Students are assigned a "monitor" who regularly checks their performance (in particular, whether students are having attendance, behavior, or academic problems) and connects with school personnel, family members, and community service providers when problems are identified. 9–12 Staying in school (+25)
ACT/SAT Test Preparation and Coaching Programs Test preparation programs with the goal of increasing student scores on college entrance tests. 10–12 General academic achievement-high school (+9)
Positive action Teaches children positive and constructive way of thinking about themselves and acting towards others using methods such as discussions, role-playing and games. The program uses factsheets, booklets and songs as teaching material. 1–12 Behavior (+19%)
Coping power The program consists of a child and a parent component. The child component consists of thirty-four 50 minute group sessions and periodic individual sessions over the course of 15–18 months. The parent component consists of 16 group sessions and periodic individual meetings. The child component emphasizes goal setting, problem-solving, anger management and peer relationships and consists, while the parent lessons emphasize setting expectations, praise, discipline, managing stress, communication and child study skills. K–12 students with emotional disturbances External behavior (+8%)
Too Good for Drugs and Violence The program promotes prosocial behavior and norms, and consists of 14 core lessons with additional 12 lessons that include roleplaying and co-operative learning. Pupils are encouraged to apply the skills taught, for example by infusing the lessons into subjects such as English, science or social studies 5, with additional program for 8 Knowledge, attitudes and values (+16%)
Pre-K Mathematics The program uses small group activities (4 – 6 children) with concrete manipulatives and includes take-home picture strips and activities that are designed to help parents support their learning, as well as a software with activities to reinforce the lessons. PK General mathematics achievement (19%)
Literacy Express Includes lessons on oral language, emergent literacy, basic math, science, general knowledge, socioemotional development. It offers the staff with recommendations for room arrangement, daily schedules, classroom management and activities, and provides them with teaching materials. PK students, especially those with special needs Print knowledge (+15%), oral language (+12%) and phonological processing (+12%)
Accelerated Middle Schools The intervention gives additional teaching and attempts to cover an additional year of curriculum during its 1 or 2-year duration. Classes link multiple subjects and are designed to have a "hands on" practical approach. 6–8, High risk and low performing students in grades who are behind their grade levels Progressing in school (+35%), staying in school (+18%)

Some of the concerns expressed about WWC are that it appears to have difficulty keeping up with the research so it may not be current; and when a program is not listed on their database, it may be that it did not meet their criteria or they have not yet reviewed it, but you don't know which.[110] In addition Straight Talk on Evidence, authored by the Arnold Ventures LLC' Evidence-Based Policy team, on January 16, 2018, expressed concerns about the validity of the ratings provided by WWC. It says WWC in some cases reported a "preliminary outcome when high-quality RCTs found no significant effects on more important and final educational outcomes".[111]

A summary of the January 2020 changes to the WWC procedures and standards is available on their site.[112]

Other sources of information Edit

  • The British Educational Research Association (BERA)[113] claims to be the home of educational research in the United Kingdom. It is a membership association that aims to improve the knowledge of education by advancing research quality, capacity and engagement. Its resources include a quarterly magazine, journals, articles, and conferences.[114][115]
  • Campbell Collaboration is a nonprofit organization that promotes evidence-based decisions and policy through the production of systematic reviews and other types of evidence synthesis.[116] It has wide spread international support, and allows users to easily search by topic area (e.g. education) or key word (e.g. reading).[117]
  • Doing What Works is provided by WestEd,[118] a San Francisco-based nonprofit organization, and offers an online library[119] that includes interviews with researchers and educators, in addition to materials and tools for educators. WestEd was criticized in January 2020, claiming they did not interview all interested parties prior to releasing a report.[120]
  • Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center (ECTA), of Chapel Hill, NC,[121] provides resources on evidence-based practices in areas specific to early childhood care and education, professional development, early intervention and early childhood special education.[122]
  • Florida Center for Reading Research is a research center at Florida State University that explores all aspects of reading research. Its Resource Database allows you to search for information based on a variety of criteria.[123]
  • Institute of Education Sciences (IES), Washington, DC,[124] is the statistics, research, and evaluation arm of the U.S. Department of Education. It funds independent education research, evaluation and statistics. It published a Synthesis of its Research on Early Intervention and Early Childhood Education in 2013.[125] Its publications and products can be searched by author, subject, etc.[126]
  • The International Initiative for Impact Evaluation (3ie)[127] is a registered non-governmental organisation, since 2008, with offices in New Delhi, London and Washington, DC. Its self-described vision is to improve lives through evidence-informed action in developing countries. In 2016 their researchers synthesised evidence from 238 impact evaluations and 121 qualitative research studies and process evaluations in 52 low-and middle-income countries (L&MICs). It looked at children's school enrolment, attendance, completion and learning.The results can be viewed in their report entitled The impact of education programmes on learning and school participation in low- and middle-income countries.[128]
  • National Foundation for Educational Research (NFER)[129] is a non-profit research and development organization based in Berkshire, England. It produces independent research and reports about issues across the education system, such as Using Evidence in the Classroom: What Works and Why.[130]
  • Office for Standards in Education (Ofsted), in England, conducts research on schools, early education, social care, further education and skills.[131]
  • The Ministry of Education, Ontario, Canada offers a site entitled What Works? Research Into Practice. It is a collection of research summaries of promising teaching practice written by experts at Ontario universities.[132]
  • RAND Corporation, with offices throughout the world, funds research on early childhood, K-12, and higher education.[133]
  • ResearchED,[134] a U.K. based non-profit since 2013 has organized education conferences around the world (e.g. Africa, Australia, Asia, Canada, the E.U., the Middle East, New Zealand, the U.K. and the U.S.) featuring researchers and educators in order to "promote collaboration between research-users and research-creators". It has been described as a "grass-roots teacher-led project that aims to make teachers research-literate and pseudo-science proof". It also publishes an online magazine featuring articles by practicing teachers and others such as professor Daniel T. Willingham (University of Virginia) and Professor Dylan Wiliam (Emeritus professor, UCL Institute of Education).[135] And finally, it offers frequent, free online video presentations[136] on subjects such as curriculum design, simplifying your practice, unleashing teachers' expertise, the bridge over the reading gap, education post-corona, remote teaching, teaching critical thinking, etc. The free presentations are also available on its YouTube channel.[137] ResearchED has been featured in online debates about so called "teacher populism".[138][139]
  • Research 4 Schools, University of Delaware is supported by the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education and offers peer-reviewed research about education.[140]

Evidence-based learning techniques Edit

The following are some examples of evidence-based learning techniques.

Spaced repetition Edit

 
In the Leitner system, correctly answered cards are advanced to the next, less frequent box, while incorrectly answered cards return to the first box.

Spaced repetition is a theory that repetitive training that includes long intervals between training sessions helps to form long-term memory.[141] It is also referred to as spaced training, spacing effect and spaced learning). Such training has been known since the seminal work of Hermann Ebbinghaus to be superior to training that includes short inter-trial intervals (massed training or massed learning) in terms of its ability to promote memory formation. It is a learning technique that is performed with flashcards. Newly introduced and more difficult flashcards are shown more frequently while older and less difficult flashcards are shown less frequently in order to exploit the psychological spacing effect. The use of spaced repetition has been proven to increase rate of learning.[142] Although the principle is useful in many contexts, spaced repetition is commonly applied in contexts in which a learner must acquire a large number of items and retain them indefinitely in memory. It is, therefore, well suited for the problem of vocabulary acquisition in the course of second language learning. A number of spaced repetition software have been developed to aid the learning process.[143][144] It is also possible to perform spaced repetition with flash cards using the Leitner system.

Errorless learning Edit

Errorless learning was an instructional design introduced by psychologist Charles Ferster in the 1950s as part of his studies on what would make the most effective learning environment. B. F. Skinner was also influential in developing the technique, and noted: "errors are not necessary for learning to occur. Errors are not a function of learning or vice versa nor are they blamed on the learner. Errors are a function of poor analysis of behavior, a poorly designed shaping program, moving too fast from step to step in the program, and the lack of the prerequisite behavior necessary for success in the program." Errorless learning can also be understood at a synaptic level, using the principle of Hebbian learning ("Neurons that fire together wire together").

Interest from psychologists studying basic research on errorless learning declined after the 1970s. However, errorless learning attracted the interest of researchers in applied psychology, and studies have been conducted with both children (e.g., educational settings) and adults (e.g. Parkinson's patients). Errorless learning continues to be of practical interest to animal trainers, particularly dog trainers.[145]

Errorless learning has been found to be effective in helping memory-impaired people learn more effectively.[146] The reason for the method's effectiveness is that, while those with sufficient memory function can remember mistakes and learn from them, those with memory impairment may have difficulty remembering not only which methods work, but may strengthen incorrect responses over correct responses, such as via emotional stimuli. See also the reference by Brown to its application in teaching mathematics to undergraduates.

N-back training Edit

The n-back task is a continuous performance task that is commonly used as an assessment in cognitive neuroscience to measure a part of working memory and working memory capacity.[147] The n-back was introduced by Wayne Kirchner in 1958.[148]

A 2008 research paper claimed that practicing a dual n-back task can increase fluid intelligence (Gf), as measured in several different standard tests.[149] This finding received some attention from popular media, including an article in Wired.[150] However, a subsequent criticism of the paper's methodology questioned the experiment's validity and took issue with the lack of uniformity in the tests used to evaluate the control and test groups.[151] For example, the progressive nature of Raven's Advanced Progressive Matrices (APM) test may have been compromised by modifications of time restrictions (i.e., 10 minutes were allowed to complete a normally 45-minute test). The authors of the original paper later addressed this criticism by citing research indicating that scores in timed administrations of the APM are predictive of scores in untimed administrations.[152]

The 2008 study was replicated in 2010 with results indicating that practicing single n-back may be almost equal to dual n-back in increasing the score on tests measuring Gf (fluid intelligence). The single n-back test used was the visual test, leaving out the audio test.[152] In 2011, the same authors showed long-lasting transfer effect in some conditions.[153]

Two studies published in 2012 failed to reproduce the effect of dual n-back training on fluid intelligence. These studies found that the effects of training did not transfer to any other cognitive ability tests.[154][155] In 2014, a meta-analysis of twenty studies showed that n-back training has small but significant effect on Gf and improve it on average for an equivalent of 3-4 points of IQ.[156] In January 2015, this meta-analysis was the subject of a critical review due to small-study effects.[157] The question of whether n-back training produces real-world improvements to working memory remains controversial.

See also Edit

References Edit

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External links Edit

  • The Evidence Based Teachers Network (EBTN)
  • Institute for Effective Education (IEE)
  • researchED.org.uk
  • Evidence based interventions, McGill University, Canada
  • Evidence based practice, The Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services (OSERS), A.S.A 2020-07-02 at the Wayback Machine
  • Evidence based education, UK

evidence, based, education, principle, that, education, practices, should, based, best, available, scientific, evidence, rather, than, tradition, personal, judgement, other, influences, related, evidence, based, teaching, evidence, based, learning, school, eff. Evidence based education EBE is the principle that education practices should be based on the best available scientific evidence rather than tradition personal judgement or other influences 1 Evidence based education is related to evidence based teaching 2 3 4 evidence based learning 5 and school effectiveness research 6 7 For example research has shown that spaced repetition also spaced training spacing effect and spaced learning leads to more robust memory formation than massed training does which involves short or no intervals 8 9 10 The evidence based education movement has its roots in the larger movement towards evidence based practices and has been the subject of considerable debate since the late 1990s 11 However research published in 2020 showed that there is still widespread belief amongst educators in ineffective teaching techniques such as matching instruction to a few supposed learning styles 12 and the cone of learning 13 Research design and evidenceContents 1 History 2 Reception 2 1 Acceptance 2 2 Critics and skeptics 2 3 Philosophical concerns 2 3 1 Meta analysis 3 Research sources and information 3 1 Best Evidence Encyclopedia BEE 3 1 1 Reading programs 3 2 Blueprints for healthy youth development 3 3 Education Endowment Foundation 3 4 Evidence for ESSA 3 4 1 Evidence based PK 12 programs 3 5 Social programs that work and Straight Talk on Evidence 3 6 What Works Clearinghouse WWC 3 6 1 Publications 3 6 2 Practice guides tutorials videos and webinars 3 6 3 Reviews of individual studies 3 6 4 Intervention reports programs and search filters 3 7 Other sources of information 4 Evidence based learning techniques 4 1 Spaced repetition 4 2 Errorless learning 4 3 N back training 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditThe English author and academic David H Hargreaves presented a lecture in 1996 in which he stated Teaching is not at present a research based profession I have no doubt that if it were it would be more effective and satisfying He compared the fields of medicine and teaching saying that physicians are expected to keep up to date on medical research whereas many teachers may not even be aware of the importance of research to their profession In order for teaching to become more research based he suggested educational research would require a radical change and teachers would have to become more involved in the creation and application of research 14 Following that lecture English policy makers in education tried to bring theory and practice closer together At the same time existing education research faced criticism for its quality reliability impartiality and accessibility 15 In 2000 and 2001 two international evidence based studies were created to analyze and report on the effectiveness of school education throughout the world the Programme for International Student Assessment PISA in 2000 and the Progress in International Reading Literacy Study PIRLS in 2001 Also around the same time three major evidence based studies about reading were released highlighting the value of evidence in education the US National Reading Panel in 2000 the Australian report on Teaching reading in 2005 16 and the Independent review of the teaching of early reading Rose Report 2006 England Approximately a year before the Rose Report the Scottish Executive Education Department SEED published the results of a study entitled A Seven Year Study of the Effects of Synthetic Phonics Teaching on Reading and Spelling Attainment Clackmannanshire Report comparing synthetic phonics with analytic phonics 17 Scientifically based research SBR 18 also evidence based practice in education first appeared in United States Federal legislation in the Reading Excellence Act 19 and subsequently in the Comprehensive School Reform program 20 However it came into prominence in the U S under the No child left behind act of 2001 NCLB intended to help students in kindergarten through grade 3 who are reading below grade level Federal funding was made available for education programs and teacher training that are based on scientifically based reading research 21 NCLB was replaced in 2015 by the Every Student Succeeds Act ESSA 22 In 2002 the U S Department of Education founded the Institute of Education Sciences IES to provide scientific evidence to guide education practice and policy The State driven Common Core State Standards Initiative was developed in the United States in 2009 in an attempt to standardize education principles and practices 23 There appears to have been some attempt to incorporate evidence based practices For example the core standards website has a comprehensive description of the specific details of the English Language Arts Standards that include the areas of the alphabetic principle print concepts phonological awareness phonics and word recognition and fluency 24 However it is up to the individual States and school districts to develop plans to implement the standards and the National Governors Guide to Early Literacy appears to lack details 25 As of 2020 41 States had adopted the standards and in most cases it has taken three or more years to have them implemented 26 For example Wisconsin adopted the standards in 2010 and implemented them in the 2014 2015 school year yet in 2020 the state Department of Public Instruction was in the process of developing materials to support the standards in teaching phonics 27 28 According to reports the Common Core State Standards Initiative does not appear to have led to a significant national improvement in students performance 29 The Center on Standards Alignment Instruction and Learning C SAIL 30 conducted a study of how the Common Core is received in schools It reported these findings a there is moderately high buy in for the standards among teachers principals and superintendents but buy in was significantly lower for teachers b there is wide variation in teachers alignment to the standards by content area and grade level c specificity is desired by some educators however states and districts are reluctant to provide too much specificity d State officials generally agree that accountability changes under ESSA have allowed them to adopt a smart power message that is less punitive and more supportive 31 32 Subsequently in England the Education Endowment Foundation of London was established in 2011 by The Sutton Trust as the lead charity of the government designated What Works Centre for high quality evidence in UK Education 33 34 In 2012 the Department for Education in England introduced an evidence based phonics reading check to help support primary students with reading In 2016 the Minister for Education reported that the percentage of primary students not meeting reading expectations reduced from 33 in 2010 to 20 in 2016 35 Evidence based education in England received a boost from the 2013 briefing paper by Dr Ben Goldacre It advocated for systemic change and more randomized controlled trials to assess the effects of educational interventions He said this was not about telling teachers what to do but rather empowering teachers to make independent informed decisions about what works 36 Following that a U K based non profit researchED was founded to offer a forum for researchers and educationalists to discuss the role of evidence in education 37 Discussion and criticism ensued Some said research methods that are useful in medicine can be entirely inappropriate in the sphere of education 38 In 2014 the National Foundation for Educational Research Berkshire England 39 published a report entitled Using Evidence in the Classroom What Works and Why 40 The review synthesises effective approaches to school and teacher engagement with evidence and discusses challenges areas for attention and action It is intended to help the teaching profession to make the best use of evidence about what works in improving educational outcomes In 2014 the British Educational Research Association BERA and the Royal Society of Arts RSA conducted an inquiry into the role of research in teacher education in England Northern Ireland Scotland and Wales The final report made it clear that research and teacher inquiry were of paramount importance in developing self improving schools It advocated for a closer working partnership between teacher researchers and the wider academic research community 41 42 The 2015 Carter Review of Initial Teaching Training in the UK 43 suggested that teacher trainees should have access and skills in using research evidence to support their teaching However they do not receive training in utilizing research NCLB in the US was replaced in 2015 by the Every Student Succeeds Act ESSA that replaced scientifically based research with evidence based interventions any activity strategy or intervention that shows a statistically significant effect on improving student outcomes or other relevant outcomes 44 ESSA has four tiers of evidence that some say gives schools and policy makers greater control because they can choose the desired tier of evidence 45 The evidence tiers are as follows Tier 1 Strong Evidence supported by one or more well designed and well implemented randomized controlled experimental studies Tier 2 Moderate Evidence supported by one or more well designed and well implemented quasi experimental studies Tier 3 Promising Evidence supported by one or more well designed and well implemented correlational studies with statistical controls for selection bias Tier 4 Demonstrates a Rationale practices that have a well defined logic model or theory of action are supported by research and have some effort underway by state educational agencies SEA local educational agencies LEA or outside research organization to determine their effectiveness 46 47 In 2016 the Department for Education in England published the White Paper Educational Excellence Everywhere It states its intention to support an evidence informed teaching profession by increasing teachers access to and use of high quality evidence It will also establish a new British education journal and expand the Education Endowment Foundation 48 In addition on October 4 2016 the Government announced an investment of around 75 million in the Teaching and Leadership Innovation Fund to support high quality evidence informed professional development for teachers and school leaders A research report in July 2017 entitled Evidence informed teaching an evaluation of progress in England 49 concluded this was necessary but not sufficient It said that the main challenge for policy makers and researchers was the level of leadership capacity and commitment to make it happen In other words the attitudes and actions of school leaders influence how classroom teachers are supported and held accountable for using evidence informed practices In 2017 the British Educational Research Association BERA examined the role of universities in professional development focusing especially on teacher education and medical education 50 Critics continue saying Education research is great but never forget teaching is a complex art form 51 In 2018 Dylan Wiliam Emeritus Professor of Educational Assessment at University College London speaking at researchED stated that Educational research will never tell teachers what to do their classrooms are too complex for this ever to be possible Instead he suggests teachers should become critical users of educational research and aware of when even well established research findings are likely to fail to apply in a particular setting 52 Reception EditAcceptance Edit Since many educators and policy makers are not experienced in evaluating scientific studies and studies have found that teachers beliefs are often guided by subjective experience rather than by empirical data 53 54 several non profit organizations have been created to critically evaluate research studies and provide their analysis in a user friendly manner They are outlined in research sources and information EBP has not been readily adopted in all parts of the education field leading some to suggest the K 12 teaching profession has suffered a loss of respect because of its science aversive culture and failure to adopt empirical research as the major determinant of its practices 55 56 57 Speaking in 2017 Harvey Bischof Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation OSSTF said there is a need for teacher centred education based upon what works in the classroom He suggested that Ontario education lacks a culture of empiricism and is vulnerable to gurus ideologues and advocates promoting unproven trends and fads 58 Neuroscientist Mark Seidenberg University of Wisconsin Madison stated that A stronger scientific ethos in education could have provided a much needed defense against bad science particularly in the field of early reading instruction 59 Other influential researchers in psychopedagogy cognitive science and neuroscience such as Stanislas Dehaene 60 and Michel Fayol have also supported the view of incorporating science into educational practices Critics and skeptics Edit Skeptics point out that EBP in medicine often produces conflicting results 61 Others feel that EBE limits the opportunities for educational professionals to exert their judgment about what is educationally desirable in particular situations 62 Some suggest teachers should not pick up research findings and implement them directly into the classroom instead they advocate for a modified approach some call evidence informed teaching that combines research with other types of evidence plus personal experience and good judgement practice that is influenced by robust research evidence 63 64 Others say there is a mutual interdependence between science and education and teachers should become better trained in research science and take science sufficiently seriously to see how its methods might inform their practice 65 Straight talk on evidence has suggested that 66 reports about evidence in education need to be scrutinized for accuracy or subjected to Metascience research on research 67 In a 2020 talk featured on ResearchED Dylan Wiliam argues that when looking at the cost benefit and practicality of research more impact on student achievement will come from a knowledge rich curriculum 68 and improving teachers pedagogical skills 69 Philosophical concerns Edit Some of the criticisms about evidence based approaches to education relate to concerns about the generalisability of educational research specifically that research findings are context dependent and that it is difficult to generalise findings from one context to another using a positivist approach 70 Counter to this position is a view that education researchers have a responsibility to consider the practical value of their research 71 There has also been some discussion of a philosophical nature about the validity of scientific evidence This led James M Kauffman University of Virginia and Gary M Sasso University of Iowa to respond in 2006 suggesting that problems arise with the extreme views of a the unbound faith in science i e scientism or b the criticism of science that they label as the nonsense of postmodernism They go on to say that science is the imperfect but best tool available for trying to reduce uncertainty about what we do as special educators 72 Meta analysis Edit Main article Meta analysis A meta analysis is a statistical analysis that combines the results of multiple scientific studies A concern of some researchers is the unreliability of some of these reports due to mythological features For example it is suggested that some meta analyses findings are not credible because they do not exclude or control for studies with small sample sizes or very short durations and where the researchers are doing the measurements Such reports can yield implausible results According to Robert Slavin of the Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University and Evidence for ESSA 73 Meta analyses are important because they are widely read and widely cited in comparison to individual studies Yet until meta analyses start consistently excluding or at least controlling for studies with factors known to inflate mean effect sizes then they will have little if any meaning for practice 74 75 76 Research sources and information EditThe following organizations evaluate research on educational programs or help educators to understand the research Best Evidence Encyclopedia BEE Edit Best Evidence Encyclopedia BEE is a free website created by the Johns Hopkins University School of Education s Center for Data Driven Reform in Education established in 2004 and is funded by the Institute of Education Sciences U S Department of Education 77 It gives educators and researchers reviews about the strength of the evidence supporting a variety of English programs available for students in grades K 12 The reviews cover programs in areas such as mathematics reading writing science comprehensive school reform and early childhood education and includes such topics as effectiveness of technology and struggling readers BEE selects reviews that meet consistent scientific standards and relate to programs that are available to educators 78 Educational programs in the reviews are rated according to the overall strength of the evidence supporting their effects on students as determined by the combination the quality of the research design and their effect size The BEE website contains an explanation of their interpretation of effect size and how it might be viewed as a percentile score It uses the following categories of ratings Strong evidence of effectiveness Moderate evidence of effectiveness Limited evidence of effectiveness Strong evidence of modest effects Limited evidence of effectiveness Weak evidence with notable effect No qualifying studiesReading programs Edit In 2021 BEE released a review of research on 61 studies of 51 different programs for struggling readers in elementary schools 84 were randomized experiments and 16 quasi experiments 79 The vast majority were done in the US the programs are replicable and the studies done between 1990 and 2018 had a minimum duration of 12 weeks Many of the programs used phonics based teaching and or one or more of the following cooperative learning technology supported adaptive instruction see Educational technology metacognitive skills phonemic awareness word reading fluency vocabulary multisensory learning spelling guided reading reading comprehension word analysis structured curriculum and balanced literacy non phonetic approach Significantly table 5 pg 88 shows the mean weighted effect sizes of the programs by the manner in which they were conducted i e by school by classroom by technology supported adaptive instruction by one to small group tutoring and by one to one tutoring 80 Table 8 pg 91 lists the 22 programs meeting ESSA standards for strong and moderate ratings and their effect size The review concludes that a outcomes were positive for one to one tutoring b outcomes were positive but not as large for one to small group tutoring c there were no differences in outcomes between teachers and teaching assistants as tutors d technology supported adaptive instruction did not have positive outcomes e whole class approaches mostly cooperative learning and whole school approaches incorporating tutoring obtained outcomes for struggling readers as large as those found for one to one tutoring and benefitted many more students and f approaches mixing classroom and school improvements with tutoring for the most at risk students have the greatest potential for the largest numbers of struggling readers The site also offers a newsletter 81 originated by Robert Slavin the former Director of the Center for Research and Reform in Education 82 containing information on education around the world The issue for January 28 2021 has a chart showing that proven tutoring programs during the regular school year are significantly more effective than other approaches such as summer school without tutoring after school extended day and technology 83 The February 11 2021 issue makes a case for using Federal Government COVID 19 funding the Learning Recovery Act to provide for the implementation of proven tutoring programs during ordinary school times 84 Blueprints for healthy youth development Edit Blueprints for Healthy Youth Development University of Colorado Boulder offers a registry of evidence based interventions with the strongest scientific support that are effective in promoting a healthy course of action for youth development 85 Education Endowment Foundation Edit The Education Endowment Foundation of London England was established in 2011 by The Sutton Trust as a lead charity in partnership with Impetus Trust together being the government designated What Works Centre for UK Education 33 It offers an online downloadable Teaching amp Learning Toolkit evaluating and describing a variety of educational interventions according to cost evidence and impact 86 As an example it evaluates and describes a 2018 phonics reading program with low cost extensive evidence and moderate impact 87 Evidence for ESSA Edit Evidence for ESSA 88 began in 2017 and is produced by the Center for Research and Reform in Education CRRE 89 at Johns Hopkins University School of Education Baltimore MD It is reported to have received widespread support 90 and offers free up to date information on current PK 12 programs in reading math social emotional learning and attendance that meet the standards of the Every Student Succeeds Act ESSA the United States K 12 public education policy signed by President Obama in 2015 91 It also provides information on programs that do meet ESSA standards as well as those that do not 92 Evidence based PK 12 programs Edit There are three program categories 93 1 whole class 2 struggling readers and 3 English learners Programs can be filtered by a ESSA evidence rating strong moderate and promising b school grade c community rural suburban urban d groups African American Asian American Hispanic White free and reduced price lunch English learners and special education and e a variety of features such as cooperative learning technology tutoring etc For example as of June 2020 there were 89 reading programs in the database After filtering for strong results grades 1 2 and free and reduced price lunches 23 programs remain 94 If it is also filter for struggling readers the list is narrowed to 14 programs 95 The resulting list is shown by the ESSA ratings Strong Moderate or Promising Each program can then be evaluated according to the following number of studies number of students average effect size ESSA rating cost program description outcomes and requirements for implementation Social programs that work and Straight Talk on Evidence Edit Social programs that work 96 and Straight Talk on Evidence 97 are administered by the Arnold Ventures LLC s 98 evidence based policy team with offices in Houston Washington D C and New York City The team is composed of the former leadership of the Coalition for Evidence Based Policy a nonprofit nonpartisan organization advocating the use of well conducted randomized controlled trials RCTs in policy decisions It offers information on twelve types of social programs including education Social programs that work evaluates programs according to their RCTs and gives them one of three ratings Top Tier Programs with two or more replicable and well conducted RCTs or one multi site RTC in a typical community settings producing sizable sustained outcomes Near Top Tier Programs that meet almost all elements of the Top Tier standard but need another replication RCT to confirm the initial findings Suggestive Tier Programs appearing to be a strong candidate with some shortcomings They produce sizeable positive effects based on one or more well conducted RCTs or studies that almost meet this standard however the evidence is limited by factors such as short term follow up or effects that are not statistically significant Education programs include K 12 and postsecondary The programs are listed under each category according to their rating and the update date is shown For example as of June 2020 there were 12 programs under K 12 two were Top Tier five were Near Top Tier and the remainder were Suggestive Tier Each program contains information about the program evaluation methods key findings and other data such as the cost per student Beyond the general category there does not appear to be any way to filter for only the type of program of interest however the list may not be especially long Straight Talk on Evidence seeks to distinguish between programs that only claim to be effective and other programs showing credible findings of being effective 99 100 It reports mostly on randomized controlled trial RCT evaluations recognizing that RCTs offer no guarantee that the study was implemented well or that its reported results represented the true findings The lead author of a study is given an opportunity to respond to their report prior to its publication What Works Clearinghouse WWC Edit What Works Clearinghouse WWC of Washington DC 101 was established in 2002 and evaluates numerous educational programs in twelve categories by the quality and quantity of the evidence and the effectiveness It is operated by the federal National Center for Education Evaluation and Regional Assistance NCEE part of the Institute of Education Sciences IES 102 Publications Edit WWC publications are available for a variety of topics e g literacy charter schools science early childhood etc and Type i e Practice guide or Intervention report 103 Practice guides tutorials videos and webinars Edit Practice guides with recommendations are provided covering a wide variety of subjects such as Using Technology to Support Postsecondary Student Learning and Assisting Students Struggling with Reading etc 104 Other resources such as tutorials videos and webinars are also available 105 Reviews of individual studies Edit Individual studies are available that have been reviewed by WWC and categorized according to the evidence tiers of the United States Every student succeeds act ESSA 106 Search filters are available for the following WWC ratings e g meets WWC standards with or without reservations meets WWC standards without reservations etc Topic e g behavior charter schools etc Studies meeting certain design standards e g Randomized controlled trial Quasi experiment design etc ESSA ratings e g ESSA Tier 1 ESSA Tier 2 etc Studies with one or more statistically positive findingsIntervention reports programs and search filters Edit Intervention reports are provided for programs according to twelve topics e g literacy mathematics science behavior etc 107 The filters are helpful to find programs that meet specific criteria For example as of July 2020 there were 231 literacy programs in the WWC database Note these are literacy programs that may have several individual trials and some of the trials were conducted as early as 2006 If these programs are filtered for outcomes in Literacy Alphabetics the list is narrowed to 25 programs that met WWC standards for evidence and had at least one potentially positive effectiveness rating If the list is further filtered to show only programs in grades one or two and delivery methods of individual or small group orwhole classthe list is down to 14 programs and five of those have an effectiveness rating of strong evidence that intervention had a positive effect on outcomes in alphabetics 108 The resulting list of programs can then be sorted by a evidence of effectiveness or b alphabetically or c school grades examined It is also possible to select individual programs to be compared with each other however it is advisable to recheck each individual program by searching on the Intervention Reports page 109 The resulting programs show data in the following areas outcome domain e g alphabetics oral language general mathematics achievement etc effectiveness rating e g positive potentially positive mixed etc number of studies meeting WWC standards grades examined e g K 4 number of students in studies that met the WWC standards and improvement index i e the expected change in percentile rank It is also possible to view the program s Evidence snapshot detailed Intervention report and Review protocols For other independent related reviews go to the evidence snapshot then the WWC Summary of Evidence The following chart updated in July 2020 shows some programs that had strong evidence of a positive effect on outcomes in the areas specified The results may have changed since that time however current information is available on the WWC website including the outcome domains that did not have strong evidence Program Intervention Description Grades Improvement area and expected change in percentile rankSuccess for All In kindergarten through first grade teachers read aloud and discuss with students focusing on phonemic awareness auditory discrimination and sound blending In the second through fifth grades cooperative learning activities built around partner reading are used It is delivered with daily 90 minute reading classes consisting of 15 20 students grouped by performance and regardless of their age One on one tutoring is provided to students with learning difficulties K 4 Alphabetics 9 READ 180 A reading program for those that are two or more grades years below grade level The classes start off with whole class instructions which is followed by computer practices that are adaptive and individualized small group activities or independent reading with a whole class wrap up in the end of the class 4 10 Comprehension 6 and general literacy achievement 4 Phonological Awareness Training Activities where children identify detect delete segment or blend segments of spoken words i e words syllables onsets and rimes phonemes or that focus on teaching children to detect identify or produce rhyme or alliteration PK Phonological processing 27 Phonological Awareness Training plus Letter Knowledge Training The added letter knowledge training component includes teaching children the letters of the alphabet and making an explicit link between letters and sounds PK Phonological processing 30 Print knowledge 27 Reading recovery Daily 30 minute one on one tutoring sessions to students who have difficulties in reading and writing over the course of 12 20 weeks 1 Alphabetics 21 Reading achievement 27 Instructional Conversations and Literature Logs Program for English learners where teachers engage students to Instructional Conversations where stories or personal experiences are discussed with teachers acting as facilitators Literature Logs require students to respond in writing to prompts or questions Responses are then shared in small groups or with a partner 2 5 Reading achievement 29 SpellRead Literacy program for struggling readers including special education students and English language learners SpellRead breaks the recognizing and manipulating of English sounds into specific skills and focuses on mastering each skill through systematic and explicit instruction 5 6 Alphabetics 18 Dialogic Reading Shared picture book reading practice where the adult and the child switch roles so that the child learns to become the storyteller with the assistance of the adult who functions as an active listener and questioner PK Oral language 19 DaisyQuest Computer assisted instruction with a storyline and practices that teach children how to recognize words that rhyme words that have the same beginning middle and ending sounds words that can be formed from a series of phonemes presented separately and also teaches children how to count the number of sounds in words PK 1 Alphabetics 23 Earobics Interactive software that provides individual instruction for phonemic awareness auditory processing and phonics as well as the cognitive and language skills required for comprehension Each level of instruction addresses recognizing and blending sounds rhyming and discriminating phonemes The software is supported by audio video and reading materials 3 Alphabetics 19 Stepping Stones to Literacy The program includes serial rapid automatic naming activities where children practice making quick visual verbal associations of known sets of colors numbers and or letter names in a left to right format and instructional prompts in English and Spanish 3 Alphabetics 30 Teach For America Placing non traditionally trained teachers in high need public schools Many TFA teachers hold bachelor s degrees from selective colleges and universities 12 Mathematics Achievement 4 Caring School Community CSC Program consists of class meeting lessons cross age buddies programs homeside activities and creation of schoolwide community by bringing school staff parents and students together to create new school traditions 6 Behavior 8 Knowledge attitudes and values 7 First Step to Success Program seeks to detect children who at risk to develop antisocial behavior patterns and match them with behavior coaches who work with the child his or her classpeers and parents for approximately 50 60 hours over a 3 month period 3 External behavior 28 Dual Enrollment Programs The intervention allows high school students to take college courses and earn college credits while still attending high school 9 12 Access and enrollment 15 Attainment 25 Completing school 7 Credit accumulation 14 General academic achievement high school 7 Check amp Connect Students are assigned a monitor who regularly checks their performance in particular whether students are having attendance behavior or academic problems and connects with school personnel family members and community service providers when problems are identified 9 12 Staying in school 25 ACT SAT Test Preparation and Coaching Programs Test preparation programs with the goal of increasing student scores on college entrance tests 10 12 General academic achievement high school 9 Positive action Teaches children positive and constructive way of thinking about themselves and acting towards others using methods such as discussions role playing and games The program uses factsheets booklets and songs as teaching material 1 12 Behavior 19 Coping power The program consists of a child and a parent component The child component consists of thirty four 50 minute group sessions and periodic individual sessions over the course of 15 18 months The parent component consists of 16 group sessions and periodic individual meetings The child component emphasizes goal setting problem solving anger management and peer relationships and consists while the parent lessons emphasize setting expectations praise discipline managing stress communication and child study skills K 12 students with emotional disturbances External behavior 8 Too Good for Drugs and Violence The program promotes prosocial behavior and norms and consists of 14 core lessons with additional 12 lessons that include roleplaying and co operative learning Pupils are encouraged to apply the skills taught for example by infusing the lessons into subjects such as English science or social studies 5 with additional program for 8 Knowledge attitudes and values 16 Pre K Mathematics The program uses small group activities 4 6 children with concrete manipulatives and includes take home picture strips and activities that are designed to help parents support their learning as well as a software with activities to reinforce the lessons PK General mathematics achievement 19 Literacy Express Includes lessons on oral language emergent literacy basic math science general knowledge socioemotional development It offers the staff with recommendations for room arrangement daily schedules classroom management and activities and provides them with teaching materials PK students especially those with special needs Print knowledge 15 oral language 12 and phonological processing 12 Accelerated Middle Schools The intervention gives additional teaching and attempts to cover an additional year of curriculum during its 1 or 2 year duration Classes link multiple subjects and are designed to have a hands on practical approach 6 8 High risk and low performing students in grades who are behind their grade levels Progressing in school 35 staying in school 18 Some of the concerns expressed about WWC are that it appears to have difficulty keeping up with the research so it may not be current and when a program is not listed on their database it may be that it did not meet their criteria or they have not yet reviewed it but you don t know which 110 In addition Straight Talk on Evidence authored by the Arnold Ventures LLC Evidence Based Policy team on January 16 2018 expressed concerns about the validity of the ratings provided by WWC It says WWC in some cases reported a preliminary outcome when high quality RCTs found no significant effects on more important and final educational outcomes 111 A summary of the January 2020 changes to the WWC procedures and standards is available on their site 112 Other sources of information Edit The British Educational Research Association BERA 113 claims to be the home of educational research in the United Kingdom It is a membership association that aims to improve the knowledge of education by advancing research quality capacity and engagement Its resources include a quarterly magazine journals articles and conferences 114 115 Campbell Collaboration is a nonprofit organization that promotes evidence based decisions and policy through the production of systematic reviews and other types of evidence synthesis 116 It has wide spread international support and allows users to easily search by topic area e g education or key word e g reading 117 Doing What Works is provided by WestEd 118 a San Francisco based nonprofit organization and offers an online library 119 that includes interviews with researchers and educators in addition to materials and tools for educators WestEd was criticized in January 2020 claiming they did not interview all interested parties prior to releasing a report 120 Early Childhood Technical Assistance Center ECTA of Chapel Hill NC 121 provides resources on evidence based practices in areas specific to early childhood care and education professional development early intervention and early childhood special education 122 Florida Center for Reading Research is a research center at Florida State University that explores all aspects of reading research Its Resource Database allows you to search for information based on a variety of criteria 123 Institute of Education Sciences IES Washington DC 124 is the statistics research and evaluation arm of the U S Department of Education It funds independent education research evaluation and statistics It published a Synthesis of its Research on Early Intervention and Early Childhood Education in 2013 125 Its publications and products can be searched by author subject etc 126 The International Initiative for Impact Evaluation 3ie 127 is a registered non governmental organisation since 2008 with offices in New Delhi London and Washington DC Its self described vision is to improve lives through evidence informed action in developing countries In 2016 their researchers synthesised evidence from 238 impact evaluations and 121 qualitative research studies and process evaluations in 52 low and middle income countries L amp MICs It looked at children s school enrolment attendance completion and learning The results can be viewed in their report entitled The impact of education programmes on learning and school participation in low and middle income countries 128 National Foundation for Educational Research NFER 129 is a non profit research and development organization based in Berkshire England It produces independent research and reports about issues across the education system such as Using Evidence in the Classroom What Works and Why 130 Office for Standards in Education Ofsted in England conducts research on schools early education social care further education and skills 131 The Ministry of Education Ontario Canada offers a site entitled What Works Research Into Practice It is a collection of research summaries of promising teaching practice written by experts at Ontario universities 132 RAND Corporation with offices throughout the world funds research on early childhood K 12 and higher education 133 ResearchED 134 a U K based non profit since 2013 has organized education conferences around the world e g Africa Australia Asia Canada the E U the Middle East New Zealand the U K and the U S featuring researchers and educators in order to promote collaboration between research users and research creators It has been described as a grass roots teacher led project that aims to make teachers research literate and pseudo science proof It also publishes an online magazine featuring articles by practicing teachers and others such as professor Daniel T Willingham University of Virginia and Professor Dylan Wiliam Emeritus professor UCL Institute of Education 135 And finally it offers frequent free online video presentations 136 on subjects such as curriculum design simplifying your practice unleashing teachers expertise the bridge over the reading gap education post corona remote teaching teaching critical thinking etc The free presentations are also available on its YouTube channel 137 ResearchED has been featured in online debates about so called teacher populism 138 139 Research 4 Schools University of Delaware is supported by the Institute of Education Sciences U S Department of Education and offers peer reviewed research about education 140 Evidence based learning techniques EditThe following are some examples of evidence based learning techniques Spaced repetition Edit Main article Spaced repetition nbsp In the Leitner system correctly answered cards are advanced to the next less frequent box while incorrectly answered cards return to the first box Spaced repetition is a theory that repetitive training that includes long intervals between training sessions helps to form long term memory 141 It is also referred to as spaced training spacing effect and spaced learning Such training has been known since the seminal work of Hermann Ebbinghaus to be superior to training that includes short inter trial intervals massed training or massed learning in terms of its ability to promote memory formation It is a learning technique that is performed with flashcards Newly introduced and more difficult flashcards are shown more frequently while older and less difficult flashcards are shown less frequently in order to exploit the psychological spacing effect The use of spaced repetition has been proven to increase rate of learning 142 Although the principle is useful in many contexts spaced repetition is commonly applied in contexts in which a learner must acquire a large number of items and retain them indefinitely in memory It is therefore well suited for the problem of vocabulary acquisition in the course of second language learning A number of spaced repetition software have been developed to aid the learning process 143 144 It is also possible to perform spaced repetition with flash cards using the Leitner system Errorless learning Edit Main article Errorless learning Errorless learning was an instructional design introduced by psychologist Charles Ferster in the 1950s as part of his studies on what would make the most effective learning environment B F Skinner was also influential in developing the technique and noted errors are not necessary for learning to occur Errors are not a function of learning or vice versa nor are they blamed on the learner Errors are a function of poor analysis of behavior a poorly designed shaping program moving too fast from step to step in the program and the lack of the prerequisite behavior necessary for success in the program Errorless learning can also be understood at a synaptic level using the principle of Hebbian learning Neurons that fire together wire together Interest from psychologists studying basic research on errorless learning declined after the 1970s However errorless learning attracted the interest of researchers in applied psychology and studies have been conducted with both children e g educational settings and adults e g Parkinson s patients Errorless learning continues to be of practical interest to animal trainers particularly dog trainers 145 Errorless learning has been found to be effective in helping memory impaired people learn more effectively 146 The reason for the method s effectiveness is that while those with sufficient memory function can remember mistakes and learn from them those with memory impairment may have difficulty remembering not only which methods work but may strengthen incorrect responses over correct responses such as via emotional stimuli See also the reference by Brown to its application in teaching mathematics to undergraduates N back training Edit Further information N back trainingThe n back task is a continuous performance task that is commonly used as an assessment in cognitive neuroscience to measure a part of working memory and working memory capacity 147 The n back was introduced by Wayne Kirchner in 1958 148 A 2008 research paper claimed that practicing a dual n back task can increase fluid intelligence Gf as measured in several different standard tests 149 This finding received some attention from popular media including an article in Wired 150 However a subsequent criticism of the paper s methodology questioned the experiment s validity and took issue with the lack of uniformity in the tests used to evaluate the control and test groups 151 For example the progressive nature of Raven s Advanced Progressive Matrices APM test may have been compromised by modifications of time restrictions i e 10 minutes were allowed to complete a normally 45 minute test The authors of the original paper later addressed this criticism by citing research indicating that scores in timed administrations of the APM are predictive of scores in untimed administrations 152 The 2008 study was replicated in 2010 with results indicating that practicing single n back may be almost equal to dual n back in increasing the score on tests measuring Gf fluid intelligence The single n back test used was the visual test leaving out the audio test 152 In 2011 the same authors showed long lasting transfer effect in some conditions 153 Two studies published in 2012 failed to reproduce the effect of dual n back training on fluid intelligence These studies found that the effects of training did not transfer to any other cognitive ability tests 154 155 In 2014 a meta analysis of twenty studies showed that n back training has small but significant effect on Gf and improve it on average for an equivalent of 3 4 points of IQ 156 In January 2015 this meta analysis was the subject of a critical review due to small study effects 157 The question of whether n back training produces real world improvements to working memory remains controversial See also EditEducational research Educational psychology Evidence based legislation Evidence based policy Microteaching Visible learningReferences Edit David H Hargreaves 1996 Teaching as a research based profession possibilities and prospects PDF Instructional strategies Understood 5 August 2019 Dimension evidence based high impact teaching strategies Government of Australia Evidence based teaching Cornell University An evidence based approach to teaching and learning Australian Council for Educational Research ACER 2005 School Effectiveness Research September 2005 doi 10 1080 09243450500114884 S2CID 144796318 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help School Effectiveness Framework Government of Ontario Canada 2013 PDF Smolen Paul Zhang Yili Byrne John H 25 January 2016 The right time to learn mechanisms and optimization of spaced learning Nature Reviews Neuroscience 17 2 77 88 arXiv 1606 08370 Bibcode 2016arXiv160608370S doi 10 1038 nrn 2015 18 PMC 5126970 PMID 26806627 The Cognitive Science of Learning Enhancement Optimizing Long Term Retention PDF Tabibian Behzad Upadhyay Utkarsh De Abir Zarezade Ali Scholkopf Bernhard Gomez Rodriguez Manuel 5 March 2019 Enhancing human learning via spaced repetition optimization Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 10 3988 3993 Bibcode 2019PNAS 116 3988T doi 10 1073 pnas 1815156116 PMC 6410796 PMID 30670661 PHILIP DAVIES June 1999 What is Evidence based Education British Journal of Educational Studies 47 2 108 121 doi 10 1111 1467 8527 00106 ISSN 0007 1005 Newton Philip M Salvi Atharva 2020 How Common Is Belief in the Learning Styles Neuromyth and Does It Matter A Pragmatic Systematic Review Frontiers in Education 5 270 doi 10 3389 feduc 2020 602451 ISSN 2504 284X Masters Ken 2020 Edgar Dale s Pyramid of Learning in medical education Further expansion of the myth Medical Education 54 1 22 32 doi 10 1111 medu 13813 ISSN 1365 2923 PMID 31576610 S2CID 203640807 David H Hargreaves 1996 Teaching as a research based profession James Tooley Doug Darby Educational Research a critique Teaching Reading PDF Australian Government Department of Education Science and Training A Seven Year Study of the Effects of Synthetic Phonics Teaching on Reading and Spelling Attainment 2005 ISSN 1478 6796 What Does Scientifically Based Research Mean for Schools Reading Excellence Act USA 2000 Comprehensive School Reform Program Title I Part F USA 2002 4 April 2012 NCLB ACT PUBLIC LAW 107 110 Section 1202 1203 JAN 8 2002 PDF Every Student Succeeds Act ESSA USA 2015 Common Core State Standards Initiative English Language Arts Standards Reading Foundational Skills K 5 A Governor s Guide to Early Literacy NGA 2013 PDF Standards in your state DPI endorses explicit phonics instruction as critical component of reading instruction Milwaukee Journal Sentinel 2020 01 22 Wisconsin Department of Public Instruction 10 April 2015 Nations report card grade 4 2019 C SAIL home page C SAIL handout May 2020 PDF 2019 20 Common Core of Data CCD Preliminary Directory Files 7 July 2020 a b Education Endowment Foundation UK What Works Network UK Government 7 June 2023 Educational Excellence Everywhere PDF England Department for Education March 2016 pp 5 6 Ben Goldacre 2013 News Building Evidence into Education researchED home page Don t import the scourge of scientism into schools Spiked 2013 09 09 NFER Home page Nelson J O Beirne C 2014 Using Evidence in the Classroom What Works and Why PDF ISBN 978 1910008072 The role of research in teacher education reviewing the evidence BERA RSA January 2014 PDF Research and the Teaching Profession Building the Capacity for a Self Improving Education System BERA RSA January 2014 Sir Andrew Carter s report on initial teacher training to the Secretary of State for Education 2019 01 19 Every Student Succeeds Act ESSA USA 2015 research 4 Schools ESSA Evidence Based Interventions Under the ESSA California Department of Education 2019 07 10 ESSA Non Regulatory Guidance Dept of ED USA 2016 09 16 PDF White Paper Educational excellence everywhere DFE 2016 03 17 Evidence informed teaching an evaluation of progress in England Research report July 2017 Department for Education UK PDF Research Commission Cost Value and Quality in Professional Learning promoting economic literacy in medical and teacher education BERA 2017 Thomas Rogers 2018 09 22 Education research is great but never forget teaching is a complex art form National association of school based teacher trainers How is educational research supposed to improve education researched org 27 April 2020 Evidence informed teaching an evaluation of progress in England UK 2017 PDF Fleckenstein Johanna Zimmermann Friederike Koller Olaf Moller Jens 2015 What Works in School Expert and Novice Teachers Beliefs about School Effectiveness Frontline Learning Research 3 2 27 46 doi 10 14786 flr v3i2 162 Promoting evidenced based education leeds ac uk Hempenstall K 2006 What does evidence based practice in education mean Australian Journal of Learning Disabilities 11 2 83 92 doi 10 1080 19404150609546811 S2CID 145110772 Kerry Hempenstall 2014 What works Evidence based practice in education is complex Australian Journal of Learning Difficulties 19 2 113 127 doi 10 1080 19404158 2014 921631 S2CID 145602310 Paul W Bennett 2020 The State of the System A Reality Check on Canada s Schools p 233 ISBN 978 0228000846 Seidenberg Mark 2017 Language at the speed of sight New York Basic Books pp 247 263 286 304 ISBN 978 1541617155 Prof Stanislas Dehaene October 25 2013 Youtube How the Brain Learns to Read YouTube Archived from the original on 2021 12 20 The problem with evidence based education policy the evidence Washington Post 2014 04 10 Gert Biesta 2007 Why What Works Won t Work Evidence Based Practice and the Democratic Deficit in Educational Research Educational Theory 57 1 22 doi 10 1111 j 1741 5446 2006 00241 x Developing evidence informed policy and practice in education Paper presented at the British Educational Research Association Conference University of Sussex UK 1999 Evidence informed teaching an evaluation of progress in England UK 2017 PDF Evidence Based Teaching in the 21st Century The Missing Link Canadian Journal of Education 40 2 2017 Straight talk on evidence Why most Non RCT program evaluation findings are unreliable and a way to improve them Washington DC Arnold Ventures 12 December 2019 A rich web of knowledge is what provides the capacity for pupils to learn even more and develop their understanding This does not preclude the importance of skill Knowledge and skill are intrinsically linked Knowledge and the capacity it provides to apply skills and deepen understanding are therefore essential ingredients of successful curriculum design OFSTED UK Government 18 September 2018 Dylan Wiliam 2020 Creating the schools our children need Oancea Alis Pring Richard 2008 The Importance of Being Thorough On Systematic Accumulations of What Works in Education Research Journal of Philosophy of Education 42 s1 15 39 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9752 2008 00633 x ISSN 1467 9752 Selwyn Neil 2014 01 02 So What a question that every journal article needs to answer Learning Media and Technology 39 1 1 5 doi 10 1080 17439884 2013 848454 ISSN 1743 9884 S2CID 205910360 Kauffman James M Sasso Gary M 2006 Toward Ending Cultural and Cognitive Relativism in Special Education James M Kauffman Gary M Sasso Exceptionality 14 2 65 doi 10 1207 s15327035ex1402 2 S2CID 144058688 Evidence for Essa Cheung Alan C K Slavin Robert E 2016 06 01 How Methodological Features Affect Effect Sizes in Education Educational Researcher 45 5 283 292 doi 10 3102 0013189X16656615 ISSN 0013 189X S2CID 148531062 Robert Slavin 2020 10 08 Meta Analysis or Muddle Analysis Johns Hopkins University Robert Slavin 2020 11 19 In Meta Analyses Weak Inclusion Standards Lead to Misleading Conclusions Here s Proof Johns Hopkins University Best evidence encyclopedia About Best evidence Archived from the original on 2019 12 27 Retrieved 2020 06 05 A Quantitative Synthesis of Research on Programs for Struggling Readers in Elementary Schools Best Evidence Encyclopedia 2021 03 21 doi 10 1002 rrq 379 S2CID 233850664 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help How Methodological Features Affect Effect Sizes in Education PDF Best Evidence Encyclopedia September 2015 Archived from the original PDF on 2020 07 08 Retrieved 2020 06 26 Robert Slavin s blog Center for Research and Reform in Education Effect sizes for programs for struggling students Robert Slavin 2021 01 28 28 January 2021 Avoiding the Errors of Supplemental Educational Services Robert Slavin 2021 02 11 Blueprints for Healthy Youth Development Teaching amp Learning Toolkit EEF UK PDF Phonics program evaluation EEF UK 2018 08 30 Evidence for ESSA Center for Research and Reform in Education CRRE Widespread Support for New Evidence for ESSA Business Insider 2017 02 28 Every student succeeds act US Dept of Education ESSA Home page 19 February 2020 Evidence based PK 12 programs Filter for Strong grades 1 2 free and reduced price lunches June 2023 Filter for Strong grades 1 2 struggling readers free and reduced price lunches June 2023 Social programs that work About Straight Talk on Evidence Arnold Ventures LLC Evidence based policy Arnold Ventures LLC Straight talk on evidence What Works Clearinghouse Institute of Education Sciences Institute of Education Sciences WWC publications WWC Practice guides WWC Resources WWC Reviews of individual studies WWC Topics WWC literacy programs alphabetics grades 1 amp 2 individual or small group or whole class delivery Intervention Reports page WWC WWC Robert Slavin s blog Director of the Center for Research and Reform in Education at Johns Hopkins University 9 July 2020 Straight Talk on Evidence WWC 2018 01 26 WWC handbook summary PDF BERA home page The role of research in teacher education reviewing the evidence BERA RSA January 2014 PDF Research and the Teaching Profession Building the Capacity for a Self Improving Education System BERA RSA January 2014 Our Vision and Mission Campbell Collaboration Retrieved 21 October 2019 Campbell Collaboration Evidence WestED home page Doing what works online library Critics say failure to consult legislative leaders harmed Leandro report Carolina Journal News Service 2020 01 13 ECTA Home page Sources of Evidence Based Practice ECTA Florida Center for Reading Research Database Florida State University Institute of Education Sciences Synthesis of IES Research on Early Intervention and Early Childhood Education July 2013 PDF publications and products IES The International Initiative for Impact Evaluation Education The impact of education programmes on learning and school participation in low and middle income countries 3ie 2016 NFER home page Using Evidence in the Classroom What Works and Why NFER 2014 Ofsted research UK Ontario What Works Research Into Practice Education and Literacy Rand Corporation ResearchED home page researchED magazine Check the programme research ED Archived from the original on 2020 07 08 Retrieved 2020 07 03 researchED Home YouTube videos 26 June 2020 Watson Steven 2020 New Right 2 0 Teacher populism on social media in England British Educational Research Journal 47 2 299 315 doi 10 1002 berj 3664 Paul W Bennett August 3 2020 Adventures in Education Guru Land Educhatter Research 4 Schools Research Enhancing human learning via spaced repetition optimization PNAS 1815156116 USA 2019 01 22 Smolen Paul Zhang Yili Byrne John H 25 January 2016 The right time to learn mechanisms and optimization of spaced learning Nature Reviews Neuroscience 17 2 77 88 arXiv 1606 08370 Bibcode 2016arXiv160608370S doi 10 1038 nrn 2015 18 PMC 5126970 PMID 26806627 Tabibian Behzad Upadhyay Utkarsh De Abir Zarezade Ali Scholkopf Bernhard Gomez Rodriguez Manuel 2019 Enhancing human learning via spaced repetition optimization Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 116 10 3988 3993 Bibcode 2019PNAS 116 3988T doi 10 1073 pnas 1815156116 PMC 6410796 PMID 30670661 Kang Sean H K March 2016 Spaced Repetition Promotes Efficient and Effective Learning Policy Implications for Instruction Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences 3 1 12 19 doi 10 1177 2372732215624708 S2CID 15347013 http stalecheerios com blog wp content uploads 2011 07 Teaching Dogs the Clicker Way JRR pdf bare URL PDF B Wilson 2009 Memory Rehabilitation Integrating Theory and Practice The Guilford Press 284 pages Gazzaniga Michael S Ivry Richard B Mangun George R 2009 Cognitive Neuroscience The Biology of the Mind 2nd ed Kirchner W K 1958 Age differences in short term retention of rapidly changing information Journal of Experimental Psychology 55 4 352 358 doi 10 1037 h0043688 PMID 13539317 Jaeggi S M Buschkuehl M Jonides J Perrig W J 2008 Improving fluid intelligence with training on working memory Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences vol 105 no 19 Alexis Madrigal Forget Brain Age Researchers Develop Software That Makes You Smarter Wired April 2008 Moody D E 2009 Can intelligence be increased by training on a task of working memory Intelligence 37 4 327 328 doi 10 1016 j intell 2009 04 005 a b Jaeggi Susanne M Studer Luethi Barbara Buschkuehl Martin Su Yi Fen Jonides John Perrig Walter J 2010 The relationship between n back performance and matrix reasoning implications for training and transfer Intelligence 38 6 625 635 doi 10 1016 j intell 2010 09 001 ISSN 0160 2896 Jaeggi Susanne et al 2011 Short and long term benefits of cognitive training PNAS 108 25 10081 10086 Bibcode 2011PNAS 10810081J doi 10 1073 pnas 1103228108 PMC 3121868 PMID 21670271 Redick T S Shipstead Z Harrison T L Hicks K L Fried D E Hambrick D Z Kane M J Engle R W 2012 No Evidence of Intelligence Improvement After Working Memory Training A Randomized Placebo Controlled Study Journal of Experimental Psychology General 142 2 359 379 doi 10 1037 a0029082 PMID 22708717 S2CID 15117431 Chooi W T Thompson L A 2012 Working memory training does not improve intelligence in healthy young adults Intelligence 40 6 531 542 doi 10 1016 j intell 2012 07 004 Au Jacky et al 2014 Improving fluid intelligence with training on working memory a meta analysis PDF Psychonomic Bulletin amp Review 22 2 366 377 doi 10 3758 s13423 014 0699 x PMID 25102926 S2CID 10433282 Bogg Tim Lasecki Leanne 22 January 2015 Reliable gains Evidence for substantially underpowered designs in studies of working memory training transfer to fluid intelligence Frontiers in Psychology 5 1589 doi 10 3389 fpsyg 2014 01589 PMC 4010796 PMID 25657629 External links EditThe Evidence Based Teachers Network EBTN Institute for Effective Education IEE researchED org uk Evidence based interventions McGill University Canada Evidence based practice The Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services OSERS A S A Archived 2020 07 02 at the Wayback Machine Evidence based education UK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Evidence based education amp oldid 1179653115, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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