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Direct Instruction: Is it an Evidence-Based Practice?

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This timely edited collection addresses a dilemma facing advocates of Direct on the one hand, the rich history of Direct Instruction (DI) as a methodology built upon demonstrated evidence of student success; yet, and on the other hand, the mounting studies done by independent agencies that deliver disappointing results about DI’s efficacy. In other words, have the DI advocates been mistaken, or is it the analyses that are wrong? To answer this question, John Lloyd and a group of highly respected contributing authors, investigates the first, what do the independent reports about the effectiveness of DI actually say? How were their conclusions reached, and how trustworthy are their methods? Next, can DI really be considered an evidence-based practice? What data demonstrate the efficacy of DI? Finally, what do weak points in the evidentiary base for DI actually reveal? What areas of future research can be identified from these studies? Topics covered include an analysis of the evaluation methods used by government agencies, a discussion of how research outcomes are communicated to the public through integrative literature reviews, and an investigation into how different types of studies tend towards particular outcomes. In relating a history of research methods in education studies and, more specifically, in the study of Direct Instruction, this book advances a nuanced argument for the pursuit of evidence-based instruction―be it through DI or otherwise.

256 pages, Hardcover

Published January 1, 2021

About the author

John W. Lloyd

12 books

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