This is my fourth Research Ed conferences (3rd as a presenter). One of the wonderful things about this conference is that everyone learns from everyone else. Since you can't be here, I am taking notes for you to learn from as well. (I can't provide notes on the first session since I am giving it, but you can go to my website www.thelearninghawk.com if you want the slides.) Please recognize that these are notes taken in real time with little to no editing. They will be a mix of what the presenters said and my own thoughts. While I try to note the difference between those two things, I don't always keep up. Please don't hold any presenter responsible for something you read here.
Keynote: From Routine to Retrieval by Patrice Bain and Amber Haven
In 2006, she had an average classroom with average scores. Research was done in lab settings but not in real classrooms. She met a couple of researchers who talked to her about memory. She realized that teachers are taught how to teach, but few are taught how people learn.
Understanding the learning process is essential for making any kind of impact in the classroom.
Research needed to happen in classrooms that have the messiness that lab setting don't (intercom interruptions, fire drills, etc.)
"Knowing how to teach by understanding how students learn is a matter of instructional equity." - Jim Heal and Meg Lee
If we start teaching them how to learn in elementary school, just think how much better their high school lives will be.
"Children are more alike than different in terms of how they think and learn." - Daniel Willingham
(Personal reflection: Students have been told that they all learn differently and taught to find their "learning style." The reality is much more empowering because they only have to find out how to learn, not some mystical idea of how THEY learn.)
We have to put information in, but storage won't be robust without retrieval. Retrieval strengthens storage.
Power Tools: Retrieval, Spacing, Interleaving, and Metacognition
Retrieval: Pulling information out
Spacing: Revisiting retrieval over time - It interrupts forgetting, strengthening memory
Interleaving: Comparing and contrasting similar items
Metacognition: Discriminating what you know from what you don't
Students spend most of their day shoving information into the your brain. It's hard to organize it or reflect on it unless you retrieve it. It's like organizing your closet by finding an item and putting it on a shelf.
"When students consistently find themselves in a predictable learning environment, they can let their guard down to engage." Mitch Weathers
Routines are the best way to reduce anxiety in all students, but especially those who are prone to high anxiety. They know what they are supposed to do, and they know what happens next. Transition times become less chaotic.
Cognitive Load Theory is important because finding the sweet spot where students can process information impacts their learning dramatically. Can you drive smoothly in England where you don't know where you are going, have a car with the wheel on the other side, are on the left side of the road, and have to use roundabouts. That is cognitive overload.
Don't be afraid to face your desks forward and reduce the amount of stuff on your walls.
Working memory is limited (4-7 things that require focus) - How can you lessen their cognitive overload?
(Personal Note: I see the chunking example with letters all of the time. I would like to see it with actual content at a conference.)
"Background knowledge allows chunking, which makes more room in your working memory, making it easier to do something with that information." - Daniel Willingham
Scaffolds are not meant to be permanent, but they need to know when you are going to remove them so they have a chance to build proficiency in the task. Everyone should have the same final goal, but scaffolds can be different to meet the needs of students. "If everyone has a scaffold all of the time, it's not a scaffold. It's your lesson plan."
Atomization - breaking down complex concepts into small pieces. When teaching weather, break it down into each of the variables that affects the weather before putting it back together.
Direct Instruction is teaching directly, but it is not a lecture. There should be instructions for students to do something (turn and talk, choral response, whiteboard answers, etc.) every two minutes.
Dual coding - provide images alongside verbal information. Have kids "sketch and tell."
Seek evidence. Don't blindly accept.
Rethinking Intrinsic Motivation by Andrew Watson
I was a little bit late to this session because I couldn't find the room. I may have missed something important.
Intentionally Provocative Questions:
Why don't student learn fractions with the same joy that they learn the names of colors or animal sounds. (Why is school demotivating?)
Why do schools teach things that aren't intrinsically motivating?
David Geary's Evolutionary Theory - Our species is unlike others in that we have to learn. Other animals are born ready to go without much teaching. A turtle is born ready to turtle.
We learn things that help with avoiding predators, getting food, or allow us to successfully reproduce. Those things are biologically primary. Learning animal sounds are obvious in their benefit to helping us avoid predators. Calculating the area under a curve does not fit into any of those categories, so it is biologically secondary.
Because we want our students to learn biologically secondary things because they are culturally valued, we need social institutions to make sure we teach them these things.
Back to the Intentionally Provocative Questions:
Why don't student learn fractions with the same joy that they learn the names of colors or animal sounds. (Why is school demotivating?) You are intrinsically motivated to learn biologically primary things but not biologically secondary ones.
Why do schools teach things that aren't intrinsically motivating? The point of a school is to teach things that students are not intrinsically motivated to learn. If they were naturally motivated to learn it, we wouldn't need to teach it to them.
Teachers are often scolded for not fostering intrinsic motivation, but that you should actually foster realism.
Self Determination Theory -
Six motivational states - Amotivation, 4 kinds of extrinsic motivation, intrinsic motivation
Amotivation - Absent
External and Internal Extrinsic Motivations - Internal extrinsic motivation does help students learn more, but external extrinsic motivation does not. Internal extrinsic motivation is valuable but not enjoyable.
Intrinsic Motivation - Internal - Enjoyable
Example: Some people truly enjoy exercise (intrinsic motivation). Others do it because they know it is valuable, but they don't enjoy it (internal extrinsic motivation)
You cannot move someone to intrinsic motivation, but you can move them from a motivation or external extrinsic motivation into internal extrinsic motivation (teaching them to value it even if they don't enjoy it) with:
- Autonomy
- Relatedness
- Competence
Any one strategy can had different effects on different students, at different moments, with different content.
Popularizing the 3 Box Memory Model: by Rob McEntarffer
I was late to this one too. I spent too much time talking to Andrew about his topic after his session.
Teachers and administrators must have a learning theory that matches reality. It must predict the outcome of teaching decisions. No matter how much you believe in it, if it doesn't result in learning, you shouldn't use it. Operating under an unrealistic learning theory gets in the way of learning.
Are you using this model to help making teaching decisions? Or are you just throwing things at the wall to see what sticks?
Personal Reflection: To make a model stick at your school, you must have a few teacher "influencers" to keep using the same language with other teachers as well as students. They need to own it, adapt it to your context, and be enthusiastic about it with others.
The pendulum swings from emphasizing content or skills every few years.
Get the people who know about things and those who are affected by it talking to each other. In universities, the people in the education department don't ever talk to the people in the psychology department. Sometimes, there is an educational psychology department, and they don't talk to the other two either.
It's imperative to ask "What is working? What didn't work?" every time you implement something new.
Why Students Forget and What You Can Do About It by Marcie Samayoa
I am very excited for this one. I've been following Ms. Sam on Twitter for years. I'm amazed at how tiny she is.
You have a great day in class. Everybody is engaged and with you. The next day, you ask them a question, and you just get an empty stare.
Showed the Ebbinghaus forgetting curve. You forget a lot of content quickly. Even a few minutes shows a high percentage of loss unless there is effortful practice. Each act of spaced retrieval results in less forgetting.
Retrieval strengthens memory, enhances transfer, and always outperforms re-reading.
When you are doing a review, you should ask students questions that they have to answer without using their notes or book. You can't and shouldn't review everything from the previous lesson; you should figure out what they have learned in a previous lesson that connects to today's lesson and have them retrieve those. (If you are going to teach about isotopes today, you need to have them retrieve things about the periodic table and atomic structure, but you don't need to cover electromagnetic radiation that day.) This automatically works in space and interleaving. Don't take more than 5-10 minutes of class time to do this.
Make sure students know retrievals are not quizzes or tests. They aren't being graded on them; this is purely for the benefit of their memory.
I want to be in Ms. Sam's chemistry class.
Science or Snake Oil? How to Tell the Difference by Holly Lane
It is lamentable that graduates from schools of education are not trained in how to find education research or how to evaluate it for themselves.
We are bombarded with snake oil in the field of education. There is a lot of garbage, and if you don't have the tools do distinguish good from bad, you will end up using a lot of garbage because there is just so much more of it out there.
We don't have an FDA in education. You can sell anything you want and claim that it is based on science.
Every program currently sold that is related to reading claims that it is based on "the science of reading." Social media makes it even worse by amplifying popular but non-scientific programs.
Because there is so much misinformation, there is still a huge gap between research and practice.
The scale of evaluating evidence (1 is the lowest quality)
- Anecdotal
- Expert opinion
- Case study
- Correlational study
- Quasi-experimental design
- Randomized control trials
- Systematic review
- Meta-analysis
Indicators of effectiveness
- Statistical significance
- Effect size - How many standard deviations above the mean is the experimental group compared to the control group
Indicators of trustworthiness
- Publication source
- Research Journals
- Practitioner Journals
- Magazines and blog (no vetting)
- Books
- Commissioned reviews usually go through substantial vetting.
- Research handbooks usually have knowledgeable editors
- Commercially published - some are gold, and some are garbage
Teach How Students Learn by Gene TavernettiThis is the third conference I've been to with Gene, and I have had breakfast with him twice, but this is the first time I've gotten to attend his session, so I've been looking forward to it all day. His book Teach Fast has been referenced by three other presenters today.
The instructional paradox: Learning is complex! But we must simplify instruction.
FAST Framework:
Focused Adaptable Structured Teaching
Focused - Eliminating extraneous load
Adaptable - One lesson structure for all content areas
Structured - Follows the same order for each lesson
Preview - accessing prior knowledge from long term memory and/or provide relevance (relevance doesn't mean "to their lives." It means relevant to the lesson.
Learning Objective - deconstruct the standard into learner friendly language that is still academic, what is the new learning today? (Have students read it as a choral response)
Review - Sub skills necessary for the lesson in the same way they are about to use the information
Explain the Key Ideas - Definitions embedded in the context of the concepts, procedures, etc. This is the "what" of the lesson.
At this point, the fire alarm went off in the museum. We didn't leave, but it slowed us down significantly.
Explain Expert Thinking - This is the "how" of the lesson. (You should model two times. If there is only one, there is no pattern.)
Gradual Release of Responsibility - I do, we do, you do - You have already modeled 2 times. Then, they do it with your guidance and questions. Then, they can practice.
Closure
Independent Practice
We remember best what we learn first and last. The bulk of instruction should be first. Then, do inline practice in the middle of the lesson. Do a closure at the end to engage in retrieval practice at the end of the lesson.