Co-author of Visible Learning into Action with John Hattie

Joined July 2017
406 Photos and videos
Debra Masters retweeted
It's the moment you have all been waiting for...the No More Marking Christmas assessment! This year you get to judge your favourite Christmas film quote. AND you get to see in real time if you agree with the AI, and what the AI thinks of each quote! Read about it and take part here. substack.nomoremarking.com/p…
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6 minutes of reading with your child each day = big impact on learning outcomes
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Happy Holidays from MastersEducation. 2024 was a big year for NZ education - with 2025 shaping up to be a year of acknowledging and strengthening the good things that already exist - let’s celebrate our wins and our fabulous teachers!
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Debra Masters retweeted
Attendance can be a better predictor of a student’s drop-out risk than test scores. These Teens Were Missing Too Much School. Here's What It Took to Get Them Back kqed.org/mindshift/63826/the…
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Ain’t that the truth?
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Debra Masters retweeted
In 2025 we're launching our first writing assessment project for New Zealand, and continuing with our existing Australian project. To find out more, take part in our intro webinar on Tues 3 December. nomoremarking.com/events?cou…
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Debra Masters retweeted
How do you support parents in managing helpful expectations of their kids? Parental expectations have an effect size of 0.50 on student performance. Balance is key—while high expectations can motivate, too much pressure can overwhelm. Learn more: ow.ly/XlPY50TVxiM
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This is a valuable paper for jurisdictions that are making investments in literacy instructions - like New Zealand currently is.
Meta-analysis of 119 studies finds that technology can improve elementary literacy instruction—especially writing—but effects were much smaller in studies with standardized rather than researcher-designed measures: bit.ly/3C4SoIs ($). Pre-print: bit.ly/3C0v8ex
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Debra Masters retweeted
Meta-analysis of 119 studies finds that technology can improve elementary literacy instruction—especially writing—but effects were much smaller in studies with standardized rather than researcher-designed measures: bit.ly/3C4SoIs ($). Pre-print: bit.ly/3C0v8ex
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Debra Masters retweeted
Back to this today. My favourite edu book of all time 🤩
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Debra Masters retweeted
Great Minds that Don't Think Alike! Join me on March 18th @WorldEdSummit alongside Living Legends @MichaelFullan1 @john_hattie @AlmaHarris1 @Sugatam & Vivianne Robinson. @uOttawaEdu @arceducation1 @SRinconGallardo @pasi_sahlberg @JJ_Stellies
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I am delighted to be speaking at the World Education Summit - be ready for impact! #WorldEdSummit
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Fab article - and makes perfect sense!
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The article "Putting Students on the Path to Learning: The Case for Fully Guided Instruction" by Richard E. Clark, Paul A. Kirschner, and John Sweller argues for fully guided explicit instruction over minimally guided approaches like pure discovery learning. The authors present extensive research evidence supporting guided instructional techniques as more effective for novice learners. This includes Mayer's review finding unguided discovery techniques less effective than guided approaches for novices across studies from the 1950s to 1980s. Each cycle a new term like discovery learning was replaced by problem-based learning, but the techniques fared poorly. Controlled experiments by Klahr & Nigam also found direct instruction better than discovery learning for science topics. Tuovinen & Sweller demonstrated worked examples led to better learning outcomes than discovery. Additional evidence includes the worked example effect showing novices learn better from studying worked examples than solving equivalent problems themselves. This has been replicated across many domains. However, the expertise reversal effect shows that as experience grows, problem solving becomes better than worked examples. The authors argue minimally guided techniques can lead to novice frustration, incorrect discoveries requiring reteaching, and are generally less efficient, requiring more time to learn the same material. Research also shows less skilled learners benefit more from explicit guidance. The extensive research presented by Clark, Kirschner, and Sweller clearly supports their position that direct instructional guidance is more effective and efficient for teaching new information and skills to novice learners across contexts. The authors build a compelling case through decades of empirical evidence favoring guided approaches for novices. aft.org/sites/default/files/…
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Debra Masters retweeted
“A bad curriculum well taught is invariably a better experience for students than a good curriculum badly taught: pedagogy trumps curriculum. Or more precisely, pedagogy is curriculum, because what matters is how things are taught, rather than what is taught.” ― Dylan Wiliam
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Having a laser-like focus on using evidence for learning will be a key message in my presentation to Ukraine authorities and schools at their Education Quality Forum on 20 September
🇨🇦 Diagnostic tests that help identify possible gaps in students' knowledge, developed by @SURGeUkraine, @MON_UKRAINE and @SQEua, are available on the All-Ukrainian Online School Platform. More in the video: bit.ly/488Itgi @Alinea_Ideas @CanEmbUkraine @CanadaDev
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Debra Masters retweeted
If female public figures recorded messages for male football teams in the style of the messages recorded for the Lionesses.
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Debra Masters retweeted
Hard copy will be released from Corwin on August 4! Ready for Action.
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Please let this argument come to an end.
No one will win the reading wars, say two reading specialists. It's time to look at the research and call a truce over the appropriate use of phonics. #EWOpinion edweek.org/teaching-learning…
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The same is happening in New Zealand. It is a crisis and nothing seems to be working (so far) to get them back to school. It’s a disaster that needs urgent attention.
Totally agree, and there is a similar crisis here in UK too. It should be the number one priority to get every child in school and learning.
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