John Hattie on Visible Learning and Feedback in the Classroom

Ғылым және технология

Leading educationalist John Hattie introduces the Visible Learning project and explains the value of feedback in the classroom.
Visible learning has three different meanings:
Research - John Hattie synthesizes meta-analyses from various literature studies, examining different types of influences that make a difference in the learning lives of students, including the home environment, the family dynamics, the educators, financial circumstances, the policies and the teaching strategies. John seeks to change the debate and refocus the question from “what works” to “what works best”. What are the influences that make the biggest difference in children’s lives?
Looking at the evidence, the majority of the teachers and schools are having a significant impact on children’s lives and learning. John questions if we possess the means to identify these teachers in schools, understand what they are doing, form a collaborative framework around them and strive for improvement so that every child can benefit of a great teacher by design, and not by chance.
Implementation - John and his global team have built up an incredible experience in implementing these concepts, leading them to conclude that it’s not merely about what the teachers do but their underlying mindset that truly matters. The team dedicates a significant amount of effort to studying the thought processes of these teachers.
Students - it is crucial to listen to students and to encourage them to speak up their thoughts openly to facilitate a deeper understanding of their errors and misconceptions.
John emphasizes the influential power of feedback as he also recognises that it is also the most variable, with about a third of the feedback proving ineffective making it a critical factor. In Visible Learning: Feedback by John Hattie and Shirley Clark, the authors examine its variability and highlight two key points:
Feedback should address one of the three questions “Where am I going?”; “How am I going?” and “Where to next?”
The most crucial consideration should not be the feedback given but the feedback received.
Learn more about what Visible Learning means on our blog:
bit.ly/3HIFhgr
#KnowThyImpact

Пікірлер: 11

  • @AlwaysAnnaiah
    @AlwaysAnnaiah3 жыл бұрын

    About time someone looked at this. Well done Prof.

  • @kobusroux2074
    @kobusroux20742 жыл бұрын

    Awesome video. Thank you for sharing this greatness with us prof.

  • @EXUA_TV
    @EXUA_TV Жыл бұрын

    Hello, exciting video. Feedback depends on the topic's learning experience and students in that particular circumstance. True, what is relevant for this group differs from the others, even with the same lesson and class level. External and internal factors become part of the process, too.

  • @charlesdelg
    @charlesdelg3 жыл бұрын

    Estou lendo o livro, já que está em português agora.

  • @bethpaff3930
    @bethpaff39304 жыл бұрын

    Teacher mindframes can make or break a lesson. Teachers need to to allow students to be a part of their learning. I always told my own kids there is no such thing as a stupid question only a stupid answer. I feel students need to be comfortable enough in the school environment to ask questions. Teacher s with a positive and learning mainframe will welcome questions.

  • @learningenglishwithteacher8361
    @learningenglishwithteacher836111 ай бұрын

    Insightful. Thank you.

  • @selinatai5762
    @selinatai5762 Жыл бұрын

    Hi 🇹🇼 Thank you.

  • @fadwaa.3658
    @fadwaa.36585 жыл бұрын

    How does feedback work in early childhood? How is it implemented?

  • @bethpaff3930

    @bethpaff3930

    4 жыл бұрын

    I use feedback with young students all the time. I feel the biggest thing is to give feedback as soon as possible. I have students come up to me after work is completed and together we go over it. Readjustment to be made are gone over and the student then understands the problem

  • @rc1952

    @rc1952

    Жыл бұрын

    In teaching, whether it is early childhood, primary, secondary or adults, the teacher needs to be an approachable, listening, communicative and open minded leader working together with the learner to actually complete learning tasks. The teacher creates the learning environment. And plans the work. They assess class work and participation, engagement and progress both in class and from completed work, carefully checked. They give accurate helpful appropriate feedback to students promptly and also to parents. This can be done at any level from age 3-adult. Currently I teach ages 5-adult. They are all different and each learner has unique needs. When learning is as Hattie says, it is overt, reflective, communicative, shared, collaborative, responsive to students, corrected, and progressing. It is amazing to have Hattie bringing the research together from many different sources to boil down/ distill the elixir for learning and teaching to be successful!! I find what I was taught (one gem) at Flinders Uni many years ago very helpful when teaching and over many years I have practised it and learnt how to use it. They called it behaviour management and one word used was proximity. Move near a student who is disengaged. Also I say: be near and know your students. Connect well. Quickly assert your teacher role upon first meeting a new group of learners. Take the reigns. When students enter the classroom they fully expect the teacher to actually lead and influence so use your influence for good. Be the change you want to see in this world. By having good behaviour management you create the environment for safe happy learning work. I am very grateful to all those who taught me as a child and adult. The many teachers, and university lecturers. I was half hearted at times but I learnt a few things that helped my life. The longer I teach the more I see it as a privilege and how important listening and encouraging are to it.

  • @freddyfriesen
    @freddyfriesen3 жыл бұрын

    Yes, but how do you get the teacher to put down their coffee, marking, or magazine and circulate around the class checking each student's pulse to see if they need any help, what is working or not, affirm student progress, determine what needs to be dispensed next and when ?

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