Sigh…
Yet another education study has been released where researchers don’t “see the forest through the trees” because they likely didn’t check in with teachers before they designed their research.
As I shared in this tweet, they missed what may be the most important role of a growth mindset in education:
These results may or may not b confirmed or refuted by other studies. However, I can say one thing 4 sure not covered in this research – having a growth mindset has a huge positive impact on my mental health, & I suspect a fair number of other teachers may feel the same https://t.co/yMhOnAZD2L
— Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) August 9, 2024
This is the not the first, nor will it be the the last, time researchers miss something that is obvious to many teachers, but they likely didn’t even consider.
I think there’s a lot of great research out there, despite other criticisms (see Feds Find In New Report That Most Of Their Funded “Innovations” Didn’t Work – Perhaps Its Time To Fund Teacher Initiatives? and New Study Raises Important Point – How Helpful Is Ed Research?
But there are also several examples from the past few years of researchers making this same mistake:
I’m Not Sure This Big Meta-Analysis On Direct Instruction Says What Its Authors Think It Says
NEW STUDY SHOWS THAT RESEARCHERS DON’T ALWAYS THINK THROUGH HOW THEIR STUDIES CAN BE MISUSED
TODAY’S EXAMPLE OF THE BLINDERS THAT SOMETIMES HAMPER THE USEFULNESS OF EDUCATION RESEARCH
Sigh… Yet another education study has been released where researchers don’t “see the forest through the trees” because they likely didn’t check in with teachers before they designed their research. As I shared in this tweet, they missed what may be the most important role of a growth mindset in education: These results may research studies Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…