I often write about research studies from various fields and how they can be applied to the classroom. I write individual posts about ones that I think are especially significant, and will continue to do so. However, so many studies are published that it’s hard to keep up. So I’ve started writing a “round-up” of some of them each week or every other week as a regular feature.
By the way, you might also be interested in MY BEST POSTS ON NEW RESEARCH STUDIES IN 2021 – PART TWO.
You can see all my “Best” lists related to education research here.
Here are some new useful studies (and related resources):
How Tone of Voice Shapes Your Classroom Culture is from Edutopia. I’m adding it to New Study Finds What Most Teachers Already Know – Our Tone Matters.
I’m adding this next tweet to Best Posts About Helping Students Develop Their Capacity For Self-Control:
In a sample of 379 mainly Black and Hispanic youth growing up in low-income areas of Chicago, attention and impulsivity control, and effortful control, were stronger predictors of college enrollment than early math/literacy skills or behavior: https://t.co/fpFEldowWn ($)
— Dylan Wiliam (@dylanwiliam) April 20, 2023
I’m adding this next tweet to The Best Posts On The Nature/Nurture Debate:
Analysis of data from the Project Talent Twin and Sibling study—a longitudinal study of 3,352 twins and siblings in high school in 1960—shows that genetic factors account for 40% of the variance in educational attainment for men, but 58% in women: https://t.co/8j3ikF4gxo
— Dylan Wiliam (@dylanwiliam) April 20, 2023
I’m adding this next tweet to THE BEST RESOURCES FOR HELPING STUDENTS – & US – DEVELOP GOOD HABITS:
Questions? Ask the brilliant @CFCamerer who was the senior author on this paper or Hung Ho or @BuyalskayaSan who led the project.
Thanks to @BehaviorChange @24hourfitness for making this possible! CC: @angeladuckw
Here’s a press release about the paper: https://t.co/kJOJeYvIui— Katy Milkman (@katy_milkman) April 18, 2023
This report says EXACTLY what so many of us were criticized for saying: that not only do kids cause the overwhelming majority of transmission, but specifically that *SCHOOLS* cause the majority of transmission. The proof is when they chart the timeline…
https://t.co/YpXdkbHENL— Stephanie Tait ♿️ (@StephTaitWrites) June 2, 2023
Recent Comments