Click here to read this mailing online.
"Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day…" - 5 new articles
TVGuessr Could Be A Fun Game To Play At The End Of Class
TVGuessr shows you a short TV clip, and then you have to guess the country from where it originated. I think it could be a fun game to play at the end of a class, with students in small groups and mini-whiteboards. I’m adding this info to: Research Studies Of The Week![]() Mohamed_hassan / Pixabay I often write about research studies from various fields and how they can be applied to the classroom. I write individual posts about ones that I think are especially significant, and will continue to do so. However, so many studies are published that it’s hard to keep up. So I’ve started writing a “round-up” of some of them each week or every other week as a regular feature. You can see all my “Best” lists related to education research here. Here are some new useful studies (and related resources): Though I think this study is constructed quite oddly, if you look hard enough you’ll find evidence in Conditions for Effective Learning from Erroneous Examples: A Systematic Review that will support the use of Concept Attainment. I’m adding it to The Best Resources About Inductive Learning & Teaching.
Can We Teach Racial Justice by Talking About Virtues? is from Greater Good Magazine. Understanding Disconnection Among American Youth is from RAND. Improving Student-Teacher Relationships Through Feedback: The Development and Evaluation of the Stanford/Leading Educators Wise Feedback Professional Development Learning Series is from EdWorking Papers. I’m adding it to The Best Resources For Learning How To Best Give Feedback To Students. Who Wants to Be a Teacher in America? is from EdWorking Papers. I’m a bit skeptical of some of its findings, especially with it suggesting that those interested in teaching are considered to have “lower intellectual promise” than others (see Do Teachers REALLY Come From The Bottom Third Of Colleges? Or Is That Statistic A Bunch Of Baloney?). Exploring Test-Optional Admissions Policies: Patterns in Applications, Enrollment, and Diversity During the COVID-19 is another EdWorking Papers…paper. New Study Finds That Peer & Self Assessment Helps Create The Conditions For Student Motivation
Plenty of past research has shown that that student self-assessment and student peer-assessment, when done well, assists in enhancing academic achievement (see The Best Ideas On Peer Review Of Student Writing and The Best Resources On Student Self-Assessment). Now, a new study that’s not behind a paywall finds that they both can have a major positive impact on student motivation. Here’s a summary of their classroom recommendations, created by ChatGPT (and I double-checked them – also, it created a one page PDF for teachers): Classroom Practice Recommendations Use Self-Assessment (SA) and Peer Assessment (PA) as regular instructional tools.
Include both comments and ratings in assessment tasks.
Provide training for students on how to assess.
Use SA and PA across different subjects and skill areas.
(For SA specifically) Include teacher feedback.
I’m adding this info to Best Posts On “Motivating” Students. Researchers Suggest That New AI Text Detectors Work
The A.I. Writing Panic Is Completely Missing the Point is an article from Slate that I actually didn’t find particularly interesting. EXCEPT for the part where some researchers are saying that newer AI detectors are now more accurate. They were specifically talking about Pangram, which I, coincidentally, have been regularly testing out during the past several months just out of curiosity. And I’ve been impressed by it. I still thinking leading with the policing route is not the way for teachers to go, but it still is nice to have a detector that can be used in the pinch. Big New Analysis Of What Works In Reading Instruction For Older Readers – Here’s What It Says![]() sof_lo / Pixabay
Interventions for students with reading difficulties in Grades 4-12: A systematic review and meta-analysis is a new study that’s open access. Like much education research, it’s written in dense academic language which makes it challenging for a layperson to take away practice advice. What I’ve started doing with these kinds of studies that a pretty useless to teachers because of how it’s written is ask ChatGPT to summarize it. Then, after I read its summary, I use it as a guide to review the study again to make sure the summary is correct. Here’s what I asked ChatGPT to do: Here’s the full study. Please review this study and summarize VERY SUCCINCTLY what it found in terms of which reading interventions were most and least effective in helping students with reading challenges. In addition, provide specific examples of what the most effective strategies look like in the classroom. Here’s its response (it also created a one-page PDF summary), and the study’s results seem to echo previous research you can find at The Best Posts On Reading Strategies & Comprehension – Help Me Find More!): What the study found (bottom line)MOST effective interventions
LEAST effective interventions
Key conclusion:
What the MOST effective instruction looked like in classroomsHigh-impact vocabulary instruction(from the highest-quality studies)
Classroom example
High-impact comprehension strategy instruction(from the strongest comprehension studies)
Classroom example
What did not work well
One-sentence takeaway for educators
More Recent Articles
|