The Lean Education Manifesto: A Synthesis of 900+ Systematic Reviews for Visible Learning in Developing Countries

Author:   Arran Hamilton ,  John Hattie (University of Melbourne)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367762988


Pages:   308
Publication Date:   31 March 2022
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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The Lean Education Manifesto: A Synthesis of 900+ Systematic Reviews for Visible Learning in Developing Countries


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Author:   Arran Hamilton ,  John Hattie (University of Melbourne)
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.640kg
ISBN:  

9780367762988


ISBN 10:   0367762986
Pages:   308
Publication Date:   31 March 2022
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Foreword by Sir Michael Barber Introduction Part One: Scene Setting 1. The Global Massification of Education 2. We Need to Get Lean 3. Reviewing the Existing Research on ‘what works best’ for Education in Developing Countries 4. The Visible Learning METAX Stop-gap Part Two: Warm Leads and Blind Alleys 5. Returns from Teacher Selection and Training 6. Returns from Structural Enhancements to School Systems 7. Returns from Teacher Accountability and Motivation Enhancement 8. Returns from High Impact Teaching and Learning Approaches 9. Returns from Education Technology Part Three: Evidence into Action 10. From Provocation to Implementation 11. Leaning to G.O.L.D. 12. Conclusions Appendix: High-Level Summary of 57 Developing Country ‘what works best’ for Education Systematic Reviews

Reviews

The Lean Education Manifesto is a radical, specific and revolutionary set of new ideas for transforming education in developing countries. This book is all the more powerful because it comes from experienced researchers who deeply know the existing situation, are willing to question all our basic assumptions, and turn just about everything we know on its head. On top of this their new ideas are specific and comprehensive. The pandemic has discombobulated what was already an ineffective and inefficient education system. I love the boldness and quality of the ideas. Here is a book worth examining closely in the search for brand new solutions. Emeritus Professor Michael Fullan, OISE/University of Toronto, Canada This book by Hamilton and Hattie, expectedly, is a tour de force. The book has multiple aspects that each would have made a substantial stand-alone work. There is of course the over-the-top development of the most extensive database on school outcomes available anywhere. There is the delineation of things that are commonly done that don't match the evidence. There is the clear set of new ideas highlighted by a focus on making economic decisions about the operation of schools. There is practical application of evidence to policy and operations of schools. But to me the key is a willingness to rethink schools, to imagine policies based more on science than on history. Imagine the transformation of the world's schools if this approach catches on. Professor Eric Hanushek, Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University, US The Lean Education Manifesto comes at a time when many children are not learning despite attending school and the pandemic further exacerbating learning losses and amplifying inequities. It provides prudent advice: we have to rethink education, in some cases radically. Simply throwing money towards bad buys is reckless. Hamilton and Hattie offer alternative thinking by drawing on their extensive research to make education work for those that need the most help. The biggest takeaway is that this echoes the thinking that we need to go back to basics with evidence, openness and systemic approach to find alternatives for impact. Dr Brajesh Panth, Chief of Education Sector Group, Asian Development Bank The Lean Education Manifesto is about learning. Particularly, what works in developing countries that have made great strides in terms of getting children enrolled in school but face formidable challenges in terms of student learning. Synthesizing almost 1000 systematic reviews gives us some answers, but also makes the case that we need more data. It is imperative that we invest in data systems and innovate in school systems. Still, Hamilton and Hattie show us what can be done with current knowledge and resources. This is a must read for policymakers, researchers, and funders of school systems in developing countries. Dr Harry Patrinos, Education Practice Manager, World Bank


The Lean Education Manifesto is a radical, specific and revolutionary set of new ideas for transforming education in developing countries. This book is all the more powerful because it comes from experienced researchers who deeply know the existing situation, are willing to question all our basic assumptions, and turn just about everything we know on its head. On top of this their new ideas are specific and comprehensive. The pandemic has discombobulated what was already an ineffective and inefficient education system. I love the boldness and quality of the ideas. Here is a book worth examining closely in the search for brand new solutions. Emeritus Professor Michael Fullan, OISE/University of Toronto, Canada This book by Hamilton and Hattie, expectedly, is a tour de force. The book has multiple aspects that each would have made a substantial stand-alone work. There is of course the over-the-top development of the most extensive database on school outcomes available anywhere. There is the delineation of things that are commonly done that don't match the evidence. There is the clear set of new ideas highlighted by a focus on making economic decisions about the operation of schools. There is practical application of evidence to policy and operations of schools. But to me the key is a willingness to rethink schools, to imagine policies based more on science than on history. Imagine the transformation of the world's schools if this approach catches on. Professor Eric Hanushek, Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University, US The Lean Education Manifesto comes at a time when many children are not learning despite attending school and the pandemic further exacerbating learning losses and amplifying inequities. It provides prudent advice: we have to rethink education, in some cases radically. Simply throwing money towards bad buys is reckless. Hamilton and Hattie offer alternative thinking by drawing on their extensive research to make education work for those that need the most help. The biggest takeaway is that this echoes the thinking that we need to go back to basics with evidence, openness and systemic approach to find alternatives for impact. Dr Brajesh Panth, Chief of Education Sector Group, Asian Development Bank The Lean Education Manifesto is about learning. Particularly, what works in developing countries that have made great strides in terms of getting children enrolled in school but face formidable challenges in terms of student learning. Synthesizing almost 1000 systematic reviews gives us some answers, but also makes the case that we need more data. It is imperative that we invest in data systems and innovate in school systems. Still, Hamilton and Hattie show us what can be done with current knowledge and resources. This is a must read for policymakers, researchers, and funders of school systems in developing countries. Dr Harry Patrinos, Education Practice Manager, World Bank What Arran Hamilton and John Hattie have done in this major contribution to the literature is to provide at a level of detail evidence of what works best in classrooms, schools, and systems. Their book provides school and system improvers with a kind of one-stop-shop, a heat map... [and] could not be more timely. My advice is read what they say, look at the evidence they cite and reflect on the implications and the opportunities for your context. Sir Michael Barber, Author of 'Accomplishment: How Ambitious and Challenging Things Get Done' and 'How to Run a Government'


The Lean Education Manifesto is a radical, specific and revolutionary set of new ideas for transforming education in developing countries. This book is all the more powerful because it comes from experienced researchers who deeply know the existing situation, are willing to question all our basic assumptions, and turn just about everything we know on its head. On top of this their new ideas are specific and comprehensive. The pandemic has discombobulated what was already an ineffective and inefficient education system. I love the boldness and quality of the ideas. Here is a book worth examining closely in the search for brand new solutions. Emeritus Professor Michael Fullan, OISE/University of Toronto, Canada This book by Hamilton and Hattie, expectedly, is a tour de force. The book has multiple aspects that each would have made a substantial stand-alone work. There is of course the over-the-top development of the most extensive database on school outcomes available anywhere. There is the delineation of things that are commonly done that don't match the evidence. There is the clear set of new ideas highlighted by a focus on making economic decisions about the operation of schools. There is practical application of evidence to policy and operations of schools. But to me the key is a willingness to rethink schools, to imagine policies based more on science than on history. Imagine the transformation of the world's schools if this approach catches on. Professor Eric Hanushek, Paul and Jean Hanna Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University, US The Lean Education Manifesto comes at a time when many children are not learning despite attending school and the pandemic further exacerbating learning losses and amplifying inequities. It provides prudent advice: we have to rethink education, in some cases radically. Simply throwing money towards bad buys is reckless. Hamilton and Hattie offer alternative thinking by drawing on their extensive research to make education work for those that need the most help. The biggest takeaway is that this echoes the thinking that we need to go back to basics with evidence, openness and systemic approach to find alternatives for impact. Dr Brajesh Panth, Chief of Education Sector Group, Asian Development Bank The Lean Education Manifesto is about learning. Particularly, what works in developing countries that have made great strides in terms of getting children enrolled in school but face formidable challenges in terms of student learning. Synthesizing almost 1000 systematic reviews gives us some answers, but also makes the case that we need more data. It is imperative that we invest in data systems and innovate in school systems. Still, Hamilton and Hattie show us what can be done with current knowledge and resources. This is a must read for policymakers, researchers, and funders of school systems in developing countries. Dr Harry Patrinos, Education Practice Manager, World Bank What Arran Hamilton and John Hattie have done in this major contribution to the literature is to provide at a level of detail evidence of what works best in classrooms, schools, and systems. Their book provides school and system improvers with a kind of one-stop-shop, a heat map... [and] could not be more timely. My advice is read what they say, look at the evidence they cite and reflect on the implications and the opportunities for your context. Sir Michael Barber, Author of 'Accomplishment: How Ambitious and Challenging Things Get Done' and 'How to Run a Government'


Author Information

Dr Arran Hamilton is Group Director of Education at Cognition Education. Previously, he has held senior positions at Cambridge University Press & Assessment (formerly Cambridge Assessment), Education Development Trust, the British Council, and a research fellowship at Warwick University. Professor John Hattie is Emeritus Laureate Professor at the Melbourne Graduate School of Education at the University of Melbourne, co-Director of the Hattie Family Foundation, and chair of the Board of the Australian Institute for Teaching and School Leadership.

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