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Blog2020-07-15T11:13:15+01:00

Didau’s Taxonomy

Taxonomy is the science of classification. As such it’s useful for ordering items within a domain into different categories. Contrary to popular understanding, although taxonomies can be hierarchical, they don't have to be so. In education, the word ‘taxonomy’ is most closely associated with the prefix, ‘Bloom’s’. As every teacher knows, Bloom’s Taxonomy is a triangle with ‘knowledge’ at its base and ‘evaluation’ or ‘creativity’ at its apex. In fact, [...]

By |April 4th, 2017|Categories: Featured|Tags: |45 Comments

The importance of reading fluency

Following on from a recent post on the folly of forcing children to read along as they are being read to, I presented my thoughts on reading fluency and the problems with 'reading along' at researchED's English & MFL conference in the stunning surroundings of Oxford University's Examination Rooms. For those who might be interested, here are the slides I used. The importance of reading fluency from David Didau

By |April 3rd, 2017|Categories: reading|Tags: |11 Comments

Global warming in education: Why Schleicher is wrong

Without data you're just another person with an opinion. Andreas Schleicher As we all know - well, most of us - the climate is changing as a result of human behaviour. Maybe we could do something about it, but it won't be painless. It would involve those of us living in the developed world giving up some of the conveniences we take for granted. If we don't make these changes [...]

By |March 31st, 2017|Categories: Featured|Tags: , |55 Comments

The problem with ‘reading along’

It has become an unwritten law of teaching that when reading aloud to students, the teacher must ensure students are reading along in their own copy of the text. This is, I contend, a bad idea. To understand why we need to consider working memory in some detail. It's well-known that the capacity of working memory is strictly limited - estimates range from anywhere between 4 to 9 items at any [...]

By |March 25th, 2017|Categories: psychology, reading|Tags: , , , |66 Comments

The consequences of freedom

Aye, fight and you may die. Run, and you'll live... at least a while. And dying in your beds, many years from now, would you be willin' to trade all the days, from this day to that, for one chance, just one chance, to come back here and tell our enemies that they may take our lives, but they'll never take... OUR FREEDOM! Mel Gibson Freedom is one of the most [...]

By |March 23rd, 2017|Categories: behaviour|Tags: , , , |8 Comments

What do teachers believe?

It's well-established that various 'myths' about how students' learn are remarkably persistent in the face of contradictory evidence. In 2014, Paul Howard-Jones' article, Neuroscience and education: myths and messages revealed the extent of teachers' faulty beliefs: In the UK, 93% of teachers believe that matching instruction to students' preferred learning style is a good idea, 88% believed in some form of Brain Gym, with 91% being convinced by the left-brain-right brain hypothesis. [...]

By |March 16th, 2017|Categories: research|Tags: , , , |8 Comments

What’s so great about making mistakes?

To err is human. Alexander Pope Making mistakes is an inevitable part of life. We're all wrong about something at some point. Equally obviously, contending with failure, learning to drag ourselves up by the bootstraps when we fall down and persist in the face of setbacks is part and parcel of human existence. But is making mistakes something to aim for? Should failure be celebrated?  Clearly, in some areas of [...]

By |March 15th, 2017|Categories: Featured|Tags: , , |32 Comments

What’s the point of school?

Education is a technology that tries to make up for what the human mind is innately bad at. Steven Pinker, The Blank Slate Schools have only ever existed in cultures where culturally specific knowledge has outpaced universal folk knowledge. What is universal - speech, recognising distinctions between the properties of inanimate objects and plants and animals, cooperating in groups, etc. -  is clearly the result of evolutionary adaptions; if it wasn't it [...]

By |March 14th, 2017|Categories: Featured|Tags: , , |16 Comments

Some videos of me saying stuff about education

Recently, Swedish education magazine, Lärarnas Tidning interviewed me about my views on various aspects of education. For those interested in seeing me do a very poor Stewart Lee impersonation, they've posted a few short clips on their YouTube channel. Here they are: 1. The importance of explicit instruction   2. Why 'grit' doesn't make much sense   3. Professionalism   4. Why teachers need to have high expectations of children's behaviour   [...]

By |March 10th, 2017|Categories: Featured|2 Comments

Do we want ‘deeper learning’ classrooms?

It's very easy to present a false dichotomy to make our own beliefs and choices seem more desirable than the alternatives. Consider this infographic from the Hewlett Foundation which has been doing the rounds: What's being implied is that the 'deeper learning' classroom somehow better prepares children for being scientists in the 'science lab' than 'traditional' classrooms. Maybe we're also supposed to assume that the 'deeper learning' classroom is a better [...]

By |March 9th, 2017|Categories: Featured|Tags: , , |17 Comments

Should we give teachers the ‘benefit of the doubt’?

Earlier in the week, Schools Minister, Lord Nash announced that schools should be more like businesses and jettison underperforming staff. According to this TES report he's reported to have said, "“I think one of the things that it’s easy to say ... is that sometimes in education there is a tendency to give people the benefit of the doubt too often.” The consequence of this well meaning woolliness is that we consign [...]

By |March 3rd, 2017|Categories: leadership|Tags: , , |22 Comments

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