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Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2016
"The only important thing about feedback is what students do with it," declares Dylan Wiliam in this article. The standard school procedure (in which a teacher looks at a piece of student work and writes something on it, and the student later looks at what the teacher has written) does not necessarily increase student learning. Teachers…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods, Student Needs, Assignments
Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2015
According to author Dylan Wiliam, because lessons never go exactly as planned, teachers should build plan B into plan A. This involves designing a lesson with a "hinge" somewhere in the middle and using specific kinds of questions--what he calls hinge questions--to quickly assess students' understanding of a concept before moving on.…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Lesson Plans, Teaching Methods, Educational Practices
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Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2014
According to Dylan Wiliam, the traditional classroom practice in which a teacher asks a question, students raise their hands, and the teacher calls on a volunteer does not actually provide much useful information--and it may even impede learning. When teachers ask questions in this way, they're only engaging the most confident students in the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Questioning Techniques, Teacher Role, Student Role
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Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2012
Just as a thermostat adjusts room temperature, effective feedback helps maintain a supportive environment for learning. Because of the many factors affecting how recipients respond to feedback, research offers no simple prescription for making feedback work effectively. What works in one classroom for one teacher will not work for another teacher.…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Feedback (Response), Student Reaction, Classroom Environment
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Vagle, Mark D. – Theory Into Practice, 2016
In this article, I try to make pedagogical adaptability a bit less obvious. In particular, I use some post-structural philosophical ideas and some concepts at the intersections of social class and race to re-interpret Dylan Wiliam's conception of formative assessment. I suggest that this interpretation can provide opportunities to resist the urge…
Descriptors: Instructional Innovation, Teaching Methods, Teaching Models, Social Class
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Lee, Clare; Wiliam, Dylan – Teacher Development, 2005
This article describes changes in the practice of two teachers, observed over an 18-month period, who were participating in a study intended to support teachers in developing their use of assessment in support of learning. The design of the intervention allowed each teacher to choose for themselves which aspects of their practice to develop.…
Descriptors: Observation, Teaching Methods, Educational Assessment, Professional Development
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James, Mary; Black, Paul; McCormick, Robert; Pedder, David; Wiliam, Dylan – Research Papers in Education, 2006
This article provides an introduction to the TLRP Learning How to Learn Project and a context for the articles that follow in this special issue. The origins of the research, in a concern to investigate the organizational and network conditions that support innovation in teaching and learning, and in a perceived need to align research on pedagogy…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Innovation, Research Design, Data Analysis
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Leahy, Siobhan; Lyon, Christine; Thompson, Marnie; Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2005
Assessment for learning, as opposed to assessment of learning, requires educators to make a major shift--from quality control in learning to quality assurance, from assessing at the end of teaching to assessing while learning is still taking place. Five nonnegotiable strategies define the territory of assessment for learning: clarifying and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Student Evaluation, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Questioning Techniques
Scherer, Marge – Educational Leadership, 2015
Marge Scherer describes this issue of "Educational Leadership" as being all about questioning for learning--how to ask questions of students, how to encourage students to ask their own questions, and how to ask better questions and find better answers. Among feature topics explored in this issue are why children, who start questioning…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Classroom Techniques, Educational Practices, Teaching Skills
Black, Paul; Harrison, Christine; Lee, Clare; Marshall, Bethan; Wiliam, Dylan – Phi Delta Kappan, 2004
In their widely read article "Inside the Black Box," the authors demonstrated that improving formative assessment raises student achievement. Now in this article, they and their colleagues report on a follow-up project that has helped teachers change their practice and students change their behavior so that everyone shares responsibility…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods, Grading
Nakahara, Tadao, Ed.; Koyama, Masataka, Ed. – 2000
The second volume of the 24th annual conference of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education contains full research report papers. Papers include: (1) "What you see is what you get: The influence of visualization on the perception of data structures" (Dan Aharoni); (2) "Exploring the transparency of graphs and graphing"…
Descriptors: Algebra, Cultural Influences, Educational Assessment, Elementary Secondary Education