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Adam Krause's avatar

In terms of "efficiency," of course I know you meant it in terms of learning speed, but of your two final scenarios there is certainly an efficiency gap in that that the tech learning environment involves all the literal $ costs of the traditional school plus all the costs of the tech equipment and software. In the US we have school systems paying literally tens of thousands of dollars per student for Ed tech software every year - literally $200,000+ for a class of 20. Somehow I doubt the results are better than what could be achieved by simply hiring 2x more teachers.

NoThanks's avatar

Great post, as always Daisy, but I feel like I need to point out that the OECD PISA in Focus doesn't (and can't) make conclusions about differences between classes within schools.

The sampling design of PISA lacks information about student grouping within schools: there isn't information about which class a student is in, only which school they are in. So, the report does say that the variation in ability of 15-year-olds within a school is often larger than the variation between schools, but it can't tell you whether those students are all in the same class or not, nor how many classes of 15-year-old students the school's sample is spread across.

This doesn't really undermine the point you are making, but it is a nuance that should be noted. Because even where a small school may only have one or two Year 10 classes (or whatever grade 15-year-olds are usually in, in a particular country), the variance of ability can be huge across the individuals - and that variation can't be completely explained by a single cause like variation in teacher quality between classes.

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