John Hattie has devoted his life to helping children learn-and enjoy learning. This book is chock full of great ideas for how parents can help their children become eager and effective learners.
Carol Dweck, author of 'Mindset' and Lewis & Virginia Eaton Professor of Psychology, Stanford University, US
A provocative new look at how parents can best support their children's learning underpinned by both in depth research evidence and hands on parenting. From the man who used mass research to show teachers how to get the best out of their teaching and his schoolteacher son, an irresistible combination and a fascinating insight for parents.
Wendy Berliner, author of 'Great Minds and How to Grow Them' and 'How to Succeed at School'
The most precious gift we can give our children is the confidence, capacity and appetite for learning. To not shy away from things that are challenging, changing and complicated is the foundation for a fulfilling and adventurous life. But how best to lay that foundation? In their new book, father and son team John and Kyle Hattie offer sound, practical advice that is based on an irresistible blend of solid scholarship and wise first-hand experience. One of the best parenting books I have ever read.
Guy Claxton, author of The Learning Power Approach and The Future of Teaching
As a father of three and an educationalist, I have read many books on family education. When I got John and Kyle Hattie's manuscript to read, something happened that has never happened before: I couldn't stop reading! From my point of view, the book is a treasure trove of helpful hints and vivid examples, full of life experience and scientific foundation. The latter is worth emphasising from my point of view: everything that is presented in the book can be scientifically proven - and that without having a scientific duct. In my opinion, this makes the book stand out in the long line of parenting guides that often spread more myths than truths. In other words, it is a book in which research and practice merge and parents get the help they need to give their children the best possible education.
Klaus Zierer, Professor of Education, University of Augsburg, Germany
Praise received for John Hattie's previous work:
Reveals teaching's 'holy grail
Times Educational Supplement
John Hattie has made a supersized contribution to the improvement of learning. Visible Learning came crashing on the scene in 2009 and got the attention of all of us. What I especially like is how Hattie and team continue to be internally critical and externally open to considering all possibilities. Their new series in search of 'the Gold Standard' is typical of Hattie's commitment and skill in processing criticism and modelling continuous learning and improvement. A million books! Congratulations for a monumental achievement and the promise of more, and more
Michael Fullan, OC. Professor Emeritus, OISE/University of Toronto.
I'm not sure John knows his own impact - I can't think of anyone in education on this planet with a higher effect size. We teachers needed a sieve to sort the research that helps teachers make a difference, from the research that doesn't. John provided it and now we all know how to increase our own impact. Thank you John!
Geoff Petty, Author of 'Teaching Today' and 'Evidence-Based Teaching'
Education research suffers from an embarrassment of riches-there's too much of it! John Hattie has been a resolute leader in summarizing this wealth of information into practical terms that are digestible yet reliably capture the essence. Better still, they translate readily to classroom practice! Hattie's success and influence are richly deserved.
Dan Willingham, Professor of Psychology, University of West Virginia, author of 'Why Don't Students Like School?'
Everything changed when Visible Learning revealed the key messages from research into influences on learning. Thousands of studies brought together confirmed what we must focus on ... educators across the world continue to have a reference point for what matters in guiding thinking and practice.
Shirley Clarke, Author of 'Unlocking Formative Assessment' and 'Thinking Classrooms'
John Hattie's contributions to generations of students, teachers, and educational leaders around the world are profound and lasting. He has that rare combination of courage and humility, fearlessly challenging conventional wisdom while continually improving and expanding his work. He makes our profession and the world of education better, and children on every continent benefit from his scholarship, wisdom, and practical guidance.
Douglas Reeves, Creative Leadership.net
Hattie's work enables us to see the effects of what teachers do in the classroom. His work on lesson preparation is one of those must-reads for all teachers. In teaching we are often looking for those light-bulb moments of illumination. Hattie has mapped the hidden wiring.
Huw Thomas, Former Headteacher, college lecturer and Diocesan Director of Education
In a world where educators are often tempted and encouraged to utilize the latest fads to support student learning, John Hattie's Visible Learning books serve as exceptional resources. Every practicing teacher, school administrator, and education researcher should have these books on their shelves.
Eric M. Anderman, Professor of Educational Psychology, The Ohio State University
John Hattie has a dream that one day every child learns not by chance, but by design. He has a dream that one day the expertise which is all around us gets together and changes the system. He has a dream that one day teachers ask themselves the powerful question What works best? instead of only What works. And he has a dream that one day teachers always seek maximum impact. And - most important - he lives his dream. He has started the fire with his passion. He sparked the learning. And he sparked the teaching. Congratulations John and: Know your impact!
Klaus Zierer, Professor of Education, University of Augsburg, Germany, and Associate Research Fellow of the ESRC-funded Centre on Skills, Knowledge and Organisational Performance (SKOPE) at the University of Oxford