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The role of evidence in the improvement of school systems

[Abstract] 
Type Report
information source ERIC
Author McAleavy, Tony.
Second author Riggall, Anna.
Naylor, Ruth.
Pages 15 p.
Publisher England: Education Development Trust، 2021
Publisher address Highbridge House, 16-18 Duke Street, Reading Berkshire. England RG1 4RU. United Kingdom. Education Development Trust. T: 00441189021000. enquiries@educationdevelopmenttrust.com. https://www.educationdevelopmenttrust.com/.
ERIC document no. ED614265
Electronic Location Full text (PDF)  PDF
Descriptors Educational improvement  -  Educational research  -  Educational practices  -  Educational development trends  -  Educational policies  -  Case studies  -  Jordan  -  Lebanon
Language of document English
Country United Kingdom
Efficient use of resources depends upon many factors, but one key variable is the extent to which we design and implement activities which require funding in a way that is informed by relevant evidence. The application of insights about 'what works', derived from robust research, combined with evidence about context and real-time system data have, when taken together, the potential to add substantial value to 'building back better' after COVID-19. Evidence is the fuel that drives smart, adaptive, impactful policy. At its best, the combination of knowing what the most effective investments are and having great system intelligence that tells us how things are translating into action and change, will enable policy and decision-making to be strategic, open to fine tuning and deeply contextualised. Education Development Trust identifies five key components needed for an effective evidence-driven approach to education reform. 1) Ensure your data systems provide disaggregated data and insight about student outcomes and learning and resource distribution; 2) Use the available evidence about what works and engage in the drive to build more of the right kind of evidence that is relevant to specific circumstances; 3) Align global insight about what works with local contextual evidence and need; 4) Mediate evidence-based insights for policy professionals and frontline staff; and 5) Create collaborative spaces where professionals at all levels can engage with evidence and reflect on practice--these can be linked to specific improvement agendas (for example, girls' education). All of these interrelated components already exist in different forms and different places. All are essential for ensuring that approaches to education reform are both effective and evidence-driven. (As Provided)

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McAleavy, Tony. (2021). The role of evidence in the improvement of school systems . Retrieved from search.shamaa.org