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    effect size

    Explore " effect size" with insightful episodes like "S5E11 Statistical Ideas That Die Hard", "Let’s Explore Effect Size with John Hattie: How We Impact Schools with Researched Thinking", "S4E15 Flipping Our Hypotheses to Test Equivalence", "Dr. John Hattie: From Visible Learning to the Purposes of Education" and "S1E02: (Statistical) Power Struggles" from podcasts like ""Quantitude", "edWebcasts", "Quantitude", "Asking For Directions" and "Quantitude"" and more!

    Episodes (5)

    S5E11 Statistical Ideas That Die Hard

    S5E11 Statistical Ideas That Die Hard

    In this week's episode, marking the fifth Quantitude Holiday Celebration, Greg and Patrick argue about their favorite holiday movies, including whether Die Hard counts as one or not; they then proceed to discuss several statistical ideas that also seem to Die Hard. Along the way they talk about so much gibberish that we don't even bother listing it here.

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    Let’s Explore Effect Size with John Hattie: How We Impact Schools with Researched Thinking

    Let’s Explore Effect Size with John Hattie: How We Impact Schools with Researched Thinking

    This edWeb podcast is sponsored by Exemplars.
    The webinar recording can be accessed here.

    “Featuring special guest speaker John Hattie.”

    Educators are managing challenging workloads and are susceptible to high rates of burnout. Join us as we examine practices that have a positive impact in schools. Professor John Hattie helps us lean into extensive research around how to de-implement practices that just aren’t effective, and replace them with cost-effective, high-yield moves to transform your classroom, school, and district. This edWeb podcast explores the following questions:

    • What is effect size? How can effect size shape pedagogy?
    • Research suggests that the process of schooling is often overengineered. How does that give us permission to dial back, carefully?
    • What are some steps in the process for deciding which initiatives are most effective—and how do we let go of the ones that are not?
    • How can we offer useful tools, templates, and charts that educators can immediately use with de-implementation work at school, in teaching teams, or at the system level that improve student learning?
    • If you were starting a new school, what practices would you suggest they lean into?

    This edWeb podcast is of interest to K-12 teachers and school and district leaders.

    Exemplars
    Our performance material promotes reasoning, communication, and higher-order thinking.

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    S4E15 Flipping Our Hypotheses to Test Equivalence

    S4E15 Flipping Our Hypotheses to Test Equivalence

    In this week's episode Greg and Patrick discuss how we might flip the traditional null and alternative hypothesis testing procedures to move us from tests of literal equality to tests of practical equivalence. Along the way they also discuss tough love, horseshoes and hand-grenades, Patrick’s Driving School, Cheyenne Mountain, So Long and Thanks For All the Fish, isn't that convenient, why people hate us, systolic blood pressure, *real* doctors, I Can’t Drive 55, splash zones, Gallagher, Dilbert, and being precisely equal. 

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    Dr. John Hattie: From Visible Learning to the Purposes of Education

    Dr. John Hattie: From Visible Learning to the Purposes of Education

    Dr. John Hattie is a Professor of Education and Director of the Melbourne Education Research Institute at the University of Melbourne, Australia. He is an award-winning education researcher and best-selling author with nearly 30 years of experience examining what works best in student learning and achievement. His research, better known as Visible Learning, is a culmination of nearly 30 years synthesizing more than 1,600 meta-analyses comprising more than 90,000 studies involving over 300 million students around the world.  His work has been described as profoundly important and ground breaking. In this episode, Dr. Hattie addresses multiple topics, including misinterpretations of his visible learning research, the measure of a great teacher, and what school administrators should do next.  

    S1E02: (Statistical) Power Struggles

    S1E02: (Statistical) Power Struggles

    In the second episode of Quantitude, Patrick and Greg channel the spirits of the two old men from the Muppet show (Waldorf and Statler, in case you're curious) and argue about the relative risks and benefits of statistical power analysis. They also discuss Patrick's mother, leaf blowing, 11 year-old saxophone players, the fortuitous ambiguity of child labor laws, vision in pigs, the poop emoji, and they properly use the word 'persnickety.' Enjoy! 

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