John Hattie 101
Visible Learning Strategies
Student Engagement
Unpacking CMS Standards
CMS Best Practices
100

John Hattie is the author of this book.

Visible Learning

100

What is the "hinge point" on the scale of effect sizes?

0.4

100

What is the name of the partner grouping cards that Chelsea gave you as a prize? 

Dynamic Duo
100

Find the least common multiple of 2 whole numbers less than 12 to +/- fractions with unlike denominators

6.NS.4

100

Teachers will be asking the students "what is the question asking?" and help students identify multiple entry points for students. 

Students will start solving with a strategy in mind and revise this strategy as needed. They will use pictures, numbers, words, symbols to help represent and reason through solving. 

MP.1 Making sense of mathematics 

200
John Hattie is currently a professor at this University. 

University of Melbourne Australia

200

This visible learning strategy takes directly teaching a concept a step further. This is directly talking about a most missed question on a Kahoot, going over most missed questions from an assessment. This strategy is reported to have an effect size of 0.6. 

Direct Instruction

200

This engagement strategy can be done with partners or in a group. The teacher poses a question. The first person responds and the group members record the first person's response on their paper. This repeats within the group until all members have shared. 

Rally Robin

200

Terms

Coefficients 

Expressions 

Rate of change/Slope

How to write and graph linear equations (table, equation, graph, and scientific notation)

M1. A-SSE.1A

200

Teachers will offer tangible tools such as rulers, protractors, algebra tiles, calculators, and base 10 blocks; and intangible tools such as problem-solving strategies.

Students use physical tools, virtual tools, and self-created tools to successfully solve a problem. 

MP5: Use tools to make sense of mathematics.

300

How many meta-analysis' did John Hattie conduct on influences on student achievement?

Over 800

300

This is the belief that as a team we all can be successful. This is believing that all our students can be successful. 

Effect Size: 1.57

Collective Efficacy

300

This engagement tool can be used in the classroom as a unit review, as an end-of-the-year review or just a fun way to get students working with problems based on the standards. Its reward for answering a question correctly is pulling an integer from a basket and deciding whether to keep the points or award them to the other team. 

The Unfair Game

300

Use tape diagrams to show equal expressions

Use word problems to show the interconnectedness of equal expressions

7.EE.2

300

Teachers will encourage students to explain answers, encourage step-by-step justifications, and support age-appropriate vocabulary. 

Students will convince others their answer is correct and use vocabulary to convince or defend. 

MP.3: Explain and Defend your reasoning

400

What outstanding connection does John Hattie have to North Carolina?

He was a professor at UNCG

400

This strategy has both expert groups and home groups. Most teachers only use level 1 of this strategy. It was created as a antidote to racial tension in the 1970's. 

This strategy is 3x the hinge point! 

Jigsaw

400

We should be using this assessment tool as a teaching tool in our classrooms to help increase student achievement once it has been administered. It offers question stems and exposure to questions similar to what the students will see on the EOG.

NC Check-in 2.0

400

Calculate the volume of spheres, cones, and cylinders given real-world situation

8.G.9

400

Teachers will help students ensure proper labeling of illustrations and introduce grade-level appropriate vocabulary. Teachers can help by ensuring students are completely answering the questions asked and using the correct units. 

Students will properly label visual representations, use grade-level appropriate vocabulary, and utilize and communicate in the correct units. 

MP.6 Communicate with Precision