| Literature DB >> 32038429 |
Benedikt Wisniewski1, Klaus Zierer1, John Hattie2.
Abstract
A meta-analysis (435 studies, k = 994, N > 61,000) of empirical research on the effects of feedback on student learning was conducted with the purpose of replicating and expanding the Visible Learning research (Hattie and Timperley, 2007; Hattie, 2009; Hattie and Zierer, 2019) from meta-synthesis. Overall results based on a random-effects model indicate a medium effect (d = 0.48) of feedback on student learning, but the significant heterogeneity in the data shows that feedback cannot be understood as a single consistent form of treatment. A moderator analysis revealed that the impact is substantially influenced by the information content conveyed. Furthermore, feedback has higher impact on cognitive and motor skills outcomes than on motivational and behavioral outcomes. We discuss these findings in the light of the assumptions made in The power of feedback (Hattie and Timperley, 2007). In general, the results suggest that feedback has rightly become a focus of teaching research and practice. However, they also point toward the necessity of interpreting different forms of feedback as independent measures.Entities:
Keywords: feedback; meta-analysis; student achievement; student learning; teaching
Year: 2020 PMID: 32038429 PMCID: PMC6987456 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2019.03087
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
FIGURE 1Flow diagram of study identification and selection.
Existing meta-analyses investigating the factor feedback.
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Excluded | Data not available | ||
| Excluded | No effect sizes indicated; no individual references provided | ||
| Partially included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Partially included | Original data received from authors; studies that do not deal with educational context excluded | ||
| Partially included | 33 sample size values missing; reconstruction from the primary studies not possible | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Excluded | No effect sizes indicated, effect sizes and sample sizes not reconstructable from original studies | ||
| Partially included | 44 of 54 primary studies excluded because they do not deal with feedback on the relevant outcomes effect sizes reconstructed from primary studies | ||
| Partially included | Effect sizes reconstructed from original studies | ||
| Partially included | Missing values reconstructed from primary studies | ||
| Included | Updated set of studies was used ( | ||
| Partially included | Effect sizes/sample sizes reconstructed from primary studies | ||
| Partially included | 38 of 45 studies excluded because they do not deal with the relevant outcomes | ||
| included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Excluded | Data not available | ||
| Excluded | Data no longer available (even directly from authors) | ||
| Partially included | 82 of 98 studies excluded because they do not deal with a school context | ||
| Partially included | Effect sizes/sample sizes reconstructed from primary studies | ||
| Included | Statistical data from meta-analysis, but no references of integrated studies provided | ||
| Partially included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Included | From meta-analysis | ||
| Excluded | No effect sizes and sample sizes indicated; reconstruction of data no longer possible | ||
| Partially included | 10 of 20 studies excluded because they do not deal with an educational context | ||
| Excluded | Data not available | ||
| Excluded | No data on feedback effects | ||
| Partially included | 45 of 49 studies excluded because data was not reconstructable |
FIGURE 2Number of study effects per year.
FIGURE 3Funnel plot of all study effects.
FIGURE 4Normal-quantile-plot of all study effects.
FIGURE 5Random-effects model calculation for the subsets of previous meta-analyses.
Tests of heterogeneity between and within the moderator subgroups.
| Research design | 29.06 (1) | <0.0001 | 5639.74 (955) | <0.0001 | 83.4% |
| Publication type | 6.15 (1) | <0.05 | 5699.39 (957) | <0.0001 | 83.4% |
| Outcome measure | 14.12 (3) | <0.001 | 4380.69 (750) | <0.0001 | 83.0% |
| Feedback type | 41.52 (2) | <0.0001 | 1541.06 (316) | <0.0001 | 80.9% |
| Feedback channel | 5.12 (2) | >0.05 | 2218.20 (337) | <0.0001 | 85.2% |
| Feedback direction | 9.35 (2) | <0.001 | 4695.60 (852) | <0.0001 | 81.9% |
Effect sizes and heterogeneity for different moderator subgroups.
| Controlled study | 713 | 0.42 | [0.37 – 0.46] | 3321.86 | 78.6% |
| Pre-post study | 244 | 0.63 | [0.56 – 0.69] | 2317.88 | 89.5% |
| Journal article | 843 | 0.49 | [0.45 – 0.53] | 5176.67 | 83.7% |
| Dissertation | 116 | 0.36 | [0.25 – 0.46] | 522.72 | 78.0% |
| Cognitive | 597 | 0.51 | [0.46 – 0.55] | 3689.88 | 83.8% |
| Motivational | 109 | 0.33 | [0.23 – 0.42] | 600.96 | 82.0% |
| Physical | 19 | 0.63 | [0.34– 0.92] | 36.65 | 50.9% |
| Behavioral | 30 | 0.48 | [−0.09 – 1.06] | 0.28 | 50.0% |
| Reinforcement or punishment | 39 | 0.24 | [0.06 – 0.43] | 123.54 | 69.2% |
| Corrective feedback | 238 | 0.46 | [0.39 – 0.55] | 1260.41 | 81.2% |
| High-information feedback | 42 | 0.99 | [0.82 – 1.15] | 157.12 | 73.9% |
| Teacher > student | 812 | 0.47 | [0.43 – 0.51] | 4510.40 | 82.0% |
| Student > teacher | 27 | 0.35 | [0.13 – 0.56] | 52.92 | 50.9% |
| Student > student | 16 | 0.85 | [0.59 – 1.11] | 132.28 | 88.7% |