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Targeted Teaching FINAL - Grattan Institute

Targeted Teaching :How better use of data can improvestudent learningPeter Goss and Jordana HunterJuly 2015 Targeted Teaching Grattan Institute 2015 Grattan Institute Support Grattan Institute report No. 2015-6, JULY 2015 This report was written by Dr Peter Goss, Grattan Institute School Education Program Director, and Jordana Hunter, Grattan Institute School Education Fellow. Danielle Romanes, Hugh Parsonage and James Button provided extensive research assistance and made substantial contributions to the report .

Targeted teaching Grattan Institute 2015 Grattan Institute Support Grattan Institute Report No. 2015-6, JULY 2015 This report was written by Dr Peter Goss, Grattan Institute School Education

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Transcription of Targeted Teaching FINAL - Grattan Institute

1 Targeted Teaching :How better use of data can improvestudent learningPeter Goss and Jordana HunterJuly 2015 Targeted Teaching Grattan Institute 2015 Grattan Institute Support Grattan Institute report No. 2015-6, JULY 2015 This report was written by Dr Peter Goss, Grattan Institute School Education Program Director, and Jordana Hunter, Grattan Institute School Education Fellow. Danielle Romanes, Hugh Parsonage and James Button provided extensive research assistance and made substantial contributions to the report .

2 We would like to thank the members of Grattan Institute s School Education Program Reference Group for their helpful comments, as well as numerous education sector participants and officials for their input. The opinions in this report are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the views of Grattan Institute s founding members, affiliates, individual board members, reference group members or reviewers. Any remaining errors or omissions are the responsibility of the authors. Grattan Institute is an independent think-tank focused on Australian public policy.

3 Our work is independent, practical and rigorous. We aim to improve policy outcomes by engaging with both decision-makers and the community. For further information on the Institute s programs, or to join our mailing list, please go to: This report may be cited as: Goss, P., Hunter, J., Romanes, D., Parsonage, H., 2015, Targeted Teaching : how better use of data can improve student learning, Grattan Institute ISBN: 978-1-925015-71-3 All material published or otherwise created by Grattan Institute is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike Unported License GoogleOrigin FoundationEYPwCThe Scanlon FoundationWesfarmersAshurstCorrsDeloitte JacobsMercy HealthUrbisWestpacFounding MembersProgram SupportAffiliate PartnersSenior AffiliatesAffiliatesHigher Education ProgramTargeted Teaching Grattan Institute 2015 1 Overview The best schools in Australia are not necessarily those with the best

4 ATAR or NAPLAN scores. They are those that enable their students to make the greatest progress in learning. Wherever a student starts from on the first day of the year, he or she deserves to have made at least a year s worth of progress by the end of it. Any less, and our students will fail to reach their full potential. Sadly, that is too often the case. Despite heroic efforts by many teachers, our most advanced students are not adequately stretched while our least advanced are not properly supported. Many fall further behind over time.

5 But supporting every student is hard. Australian research shows that achievement can be spread over five to eight year levels within a single class: a Year 7 class may have students working at a Year 1 level, while others have mastered concepts from Year 8. Schools and teachers have long understood this challenge, yet many struggle to respond effectively. Streaming students or holding back low performers is not the answer. Instead, Teaching must be Targeted to each student s needs. This requires accurate information about what students know and are ready to learn next.

6 While NAPLAN tests provide essential data for system monitoring and can point to areas of strength and weakness in a classroom, on their own they are too imprecise, and held too infrequently, to identify each student s specific learning needs. Instead, schools should use NAPLAN as part of a balanced system of assessment. There is a better way. Teachers and schools can lift all students performance if they are equipped to collect and use evidence of individual student achievement and progress. Working together, teachers should assess what each student knows now, target their Teaching to what they are ready to learn next, and track each student s progress over time.

7 Teachers should then analyse their own impact, keep what works and change what does not. In the world s largest analysis of the factors that improve student learning, Professor John Hattie shows that the Teaching strategies with the greatest impact are those that use evidence of learning to inform and improve Teaching . Investing in student progress requires giving every teacher the time, tools and training to collect and use evidence to target their Teaching in this way. Done well, this investment could boost learning enough to land Australia among the world's top five performing countries on PISA tests.

8 The challenge is to embed Targeted Teaching in every classroom. Schools and governments must both step up. Many schools say they already target Teaching . Certainly, they are not short of data. But this does not mean they are collecting the right information at the right time and using it effectively. Most have a long way to go. And they can t make all the changes needed on their own. Governments and school systems must provide more guidance and support so all teachers have the capacity to target their Teaching to every individual student.

9 It would cost roughly $300 million per year to roll out the best of today s programs to the schools that need it most. The cost and the changes for schools and school systems are significant, but the rewards are worth it. This report shows the Teaching Grattan Institute 2015 2 RecommendationsFor schools and teachers 1. Schools should develop a plan to collect robust evidence of student learning (what each student is ready to learn next, and how much her learning has progressed) and use this data to target Teaching and track student progress over time.

10 2. All teachers should target Teaching in their classroom, with schools providing the time, tools and training needed to embed Targeted Teaching and track progress. 3. To ensure effective implementation, school leaders should identify priorities, set clear expectations and recognise that change takes time. For governments and system leaders Governments and system leaders should: 4. Invest in assessment tools and related resources that help teachers collect and use high quality data about individual student learning.


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