I wonder if the Education Endowment Foundation based their summaries on John Hattie's meta - analyses
called Visible Learning.
Over the past 28 years he has published a dozen books, mostly on a theory
he calls Visible Learning.
Not exact matches
To
learn more about specific galaxies, astronomers can draw on NASA's fleet of space telescopes, including Spitzer for infrared, the Hubble Space Telescope for
visible light, and the Galaxy Evolution Explorer,
called Galex, for ultraviolet.
Project Zero's Making
Learning Visible team (Mara Krechevsky and Melissa Rivard), together with the Boston Public Schools Early Childhood Department, the Boston Children's Museum, and the Wheelock College Documentation Studio, presented a unique event
called «Kids are the Experts!»
Hattie suggests that teachers administer the following «personal health check» for the principles of what he
calls «
Visible Learning»:
«Over the years, whether we were developing portfolios or trying to teach for understanding systematically or getting involved with making
learning visible, whenever we have
called for help, they've always come....
Through this partnership with Dr. Fisher, Achieve3000 is taking the best research from Dr. Fisher's book
Visible Learning for Literacy, cowritten with Dr. John Hattie and Dr. Nancy Frey, to accelerate student learning with a new instructional model called Read - Discuss - Read, designed to increase student comprehension through repeated readings, classroom discussion, and
Learning for Literacy, cowritten with Dr. John Hattie and Dr. Nancy Frey, to accelerate student
learning with a new instructional model called Read - Discuss - Read, designed to increase student comprehension through repeated readings, classroom discussion, and
learning with a new instructional model
called Read - Discuss - Read, designed to increase student comprehension through repeated readings, classroom discussion, and debate.
Park Forest Elementary used a sketchbook project that teachers
called «Making
Learning Visible.»
Hawk Talks are designed to help you
learn not only when that speck in the sky is a raptor, but just what kind of raptor it might be — based on the shape of its silhouette, the style of its flight, and any patterns on its body (
called field marks) that are
visible through binoculars or a spotting scope.