Sage on the stage: is lecturing really all that bad?
Schwerdt, Guido ; Wuppermann, Amelie C.
In recent years, a consensus has emerged among researchers that
teacher quality matters enormously for student performance. Students
taught by more-effective teachers learn substantially more over the
course of the year than students taught by less-effective teachers. Yet
little is known about what makes for a more-effective teacher.
Most research on teacher effectiveness has focused on teacher
attributes, finding that readily measurable characteristics such as
experience, certification, and graduate degrees generally have little
impact on student achievement. Relatively few rigorous studies look
inside the classroom to see what kinds of teaching styles are the most
effective. We tackle this underexplored area by investigating the
relative effects of two teacher practices--lecture-style presentations
and in-class problem solving--on the achievement of middle-school
students in math and science.
Ever since John Dewey explored hands-on learning at the University
of Chicago Laboratory School more than a century ago, lecture-style
presentations have been criticized as old-fashioned and ineffective. It
is said, for example, that lectures presume that all students learn at
the same pace and fail to provide instructors with feedback about which
aspects of a lesson students have mastered. Students' attention may
wander during lectures, and they may more easily forget information they
encountered in this passive manner. Lectures also emphasize learning by
listening, which may disadvantage students who favor other learning
styles.
Alternative instructional practices based on active and
problem-oriented learning presumably do not suffer from these
disadvantages. But they may have their own shortcomings. Learning by
problem-solving may be less efficient, as discovery and problem-solving
often take more time than mastering information received from an
authority figure. And incorrect or misleading information may be
conveyed in conversations among students in middle schools.
Nonetheless, a number of small-scale studies have identified
positive impacts of interactive teaching styles on student learning. As
a consequence, prominent organizations such as the National Research
Council and the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, since at
least 1980, have called for teachers to engage students in constructing
their own new knowledge through more hands-on learning and group work.
By the mid-1990s, in a study for the National Institute for Science
Education, Iris Weiss could identify "some encouraging signs. The
majority of elementary, middle, and high school science and mathematics
classes worked in small groups at least once a week, and roughly one in
four classes did so every day. Moreover, the use of hands-on activities
had increased since the mid-1980s." Even so, more than a decade
later, traditional lecture and textbook methodologies continue to be a
significant component of science and mathematics instruction in U.S.
middle schools. A rigorous, large-scale study has yet to resolve a
question that has divided pedagogical thinking for generations.
In our study, we examine whether student achievement in the United
States is affected by the share of teaching time devoted to
lecture-style presentations as distinct from problem-solving activities.
Employing information on in-class time use provided by a nationally
representative sample of U.S. teachers in the 2003 Trends in
International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS), we estimate the
impact of teaching practices on student achievement by looking at the
differential effects on the same student of two different teachers,
using two different teaching strategies. We find that teaching style
matters for student achievement, but in the opposite direction than
anticipated by conventional wisdom: an emphasis on lecture-style
presentations (rather than problem-solving activities) is associated
with an increase-not a decrease--in student achievement. This result
implies that a shift to problem-solving instruction is more likely to
adversely affect student learning than to improve it.
Data and Methodology
Our research draws on data from the 2003 Trends in International
Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS). The TIMSS data comprise
information on students in two grades in a number of countries, but we
utilize only information on 8th-grade students in the United States. Our
sample includes 6,310 students in 205 schools with 639 teachers (303
math teachers and 355 science teachers, of which 19 teach both
subjects). In addition to test scores in math and science, the TIMSS
data include background information on students' home and family
life as well as data on teacher characteristics, qualifications, and
classroom practices. School principals provide information on school
characteristics.
Most important for our purpose, teachers were asked what proportion
of time in a typical week students spent on each of eight in-class
activities. The overall time in class apportioned to three of these
activities--listening to lecture-style presentation, working on problems
with the teacher's guidance, and working on problems without
guidance--likely provides a good proxy for the time in class in which
students are taught new material. We divided the amount of time spent
listening to lecture-style presentations by the total amount of time
spent on each of these three activities to generate a single measure of
how much time the teacher devoted to lecturing relative to how much time
was devoted to problem-solving activities.
A change in our measure of teaching style can be interpreted as a
shift from spending time on one practice to spending time on the other,
holding constant the total time spent on both practices. For example, an
increase of 0.1 indicates that 10 percentage points of total time
devoted to teaching new material are shifted from teaching based on
problem solving to giving lecture-style presentations. We combined the
other teaching activities (besides lecturing and problem solving) into a
separate measure of the share of total teaching time devoted to other
activities and control for this measure throughout our analysis. We also
control for the total number of minutes per week that the teacher
reported teaching the math or science class, as more total instructional
time could have an independent effect on student learning.
Although it is difficult to determine from the TIMSS data exactly
how much time is spent on lecturing as distinct from problem-solving
activities, it appears that teachers generally follow the advice given
by progressive educators. On average, they allocate twice as much time
to problem-solving activities as to direct instruction. Specifically,
teachers devote about 40 percent of class time to problem-solving
activities (with or without teacher guidance); during roughly 20 percent
of class time, students listen to the initial presentation of material
to be learned. The remainder of the class time is allocated to such
tasks as class management, reviewing homework, re-teaching the material,
and clarifying content (see Figure 1).
Teachers who spent more time lecturing were more likely to be male
and under age 50. Interestingly, they were also less likely to have the
maximum number of years of teacher training registered by the background
survey or to have taken pedagogical or content knowledge classes in the
prior two years (see Figure 2).
A key challenge in studying the effects of teaching practices is
that teachers may adjust their methods in response to the ability or
behavior of their students. If teachers tend to rely more on lectures
when assigned more capable or attentive students, this would generate a
positive relationship between the amount of time spent lecturing and
student achievement, even in the absence of a true causal effect.
Similarly, there could be unobserved differences between students whose
teachers rely more and less heavily on lecturing if, for example,
teachers in schools serving low-income students adopt different
practices than teachers in other types of schools.
To address these concerns, we exploit the fact that the TIMSS study
tested each student in both mathematics and science. This allows us to
compare the math and science test scores of individual students whose
teacher in one subject tended to emphasize a different teaching style
than their teacher in the other subject. In other words, we ask, if a
given student's math teacher spent more (or less) time lecturing
than his or her science teacher, does the student perform better or
worse on the math test than on the science test?
Results
Contrary to contemporary pedagogical thinking, we find that
students score higher on standardized tests in the subject in which
their teachers spent more time on lecture-style presentations than in
the subject in which the teacher devoted more time to problem-solving
activities. For both math and science, a shift of 10 percentage points
of time from problem solving to lecture-style presentations (e.g.,
increasing the share of time spent lecturing from 20 to 30 percent) is
associated with an increase in student test scores of 1 percent of a
standard deviation. Another way to state the same finding that students
learn less in the classes in which their teachers spend more time on
in-class problem solving.
How Teachers Use Class Time (Figure 1)
On average, 8th-grade math and science teachers in 2003 allocated twice
as much time to problem-solving activities as to direct instruction.
Math Science
listening to lecture-style presentation 18% 20%
working on problems with the teacher's guidance 21% 18%
working on problems without guidance 18% 17%
listening to the teacher reteach and clarify content 11% 11%
reviewing homework 13% 9%
taking tests or quizzes 11% 9%
classroom management 5% 6%
other activities 3% 10%
SOURCE: 2003 Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study
(TIMSS)
Note: Table made from pie chart.
Importantly, the strength of the relationship increases when we
restrict our analysis to the roughly one-third of students in the TIMSS
sample who had the exact same peers in both their math and science
classes. Among this is group of students, a shift of 10 percentage
points of time from problem solving to lecturing is associated with an
increase in test scores of almost 4 percent of a standard deviation--or
between one and two months' worth of learning in a typical school
year (see Figure 3). This pattern increases our confidence that the
overall result does not reflect differences in the peer composition of
students' math or science classes. In fact, it suggests that peer
effects may actually be leading us to understate the strength of the
relationship between lecturing and student learning.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
Do certain types of students benefit more from lectures than
others? We find suggestive evidence that the relationship between
lecture-style teaching and achievement is strongest among
higher-achieving and more-advantaged students. For example, the positive
effect is largest for students who report having more than one bookcase
in the home, a rough indicator of the quality of their home environment.
There is no evidence, however, that lower-achieving students or students
from less-advantaged backgrounds learn less when their teachers
emphasize lectures.
These patterns are consistent with the findings of a 1997 study by
Dominic Brewer and Dan Goldhaber, which found that more in-class problem
solving for American 10th-grade students in math is related to lower
test scores on a standardized test. Because our results are based on
comparisons of the same student in two different classes, however, they
are less subject to the concern that teachers adjust their practices
based on the students to which they are assigned. Furthermore, the other
commonly investigated teacher characteristics (e.g., gender, experience,
and credentials) do not show significant effects on student achievement
in our analysis. This is in line with previous findings in the
literature and underscores the importance of the statistical
relationship between more lecture-style teaching and student
achievement.
While the richness of the TIMSS data enables us to control for an
unusually large set of teacher characteristics, our results could still
be biased if teachers with different effectiveness levels are more
likely to choose different teaching styles. For example, if
more-effective teachers tend to spend more time lecturing because they
are good at it and enjoy it, then our results could show a positive
effect of lecture-style presentations, even if those teachers would have
been even more effective had they devoted more time on problem-solving
activities. Given the pedagogical emphasis on the use of problem-solving
activities, it seems unlikely that the very best teachers would be using
the less-effective teaching style (the only alternative explanation for
our finding).
Still, it is important to keep in mind that our results are limited
to student achievement as measured by the 2003 TIMSS test scores in
8th-grade math and science in the United States. Different results might
be found for different subjects, grades, or tests. Depending on the
teacher, the students, the content taught, or other factors,
problem-solving activities could turn out to be the more effective
style. Even though lecture-style teaching seems to be a more effective
method in middle-school math and science, that does not mean it would be
the preferable approach to elementary-school reading.
Also, our findings are based on student performance on the TIMSS
math and science exams, which are designed to measure mastery of factual
knowledge of the curricula that schools expect students to learn. Other
tests intended to measure problem-solving ability and the competence to
apply mathematical and scientific concepts in real-world settings (such
as the Programme for International Student Assessment [PISA]
administered by the Organization of Economic Cooperation and
Development) might yield different results. Unfortunately, we are unable
to ascertain whether this might be the case, as PISA did not ask
teachers about their pedagogical approach.
Finally, our information on teaching practices, which is based on
in-class time use reported by teachers, does not allow us to distinguish
between different implementations of teaching practices. In other words,
a certain teaching technique may be very effective if implemented in the
optimal way. But the strength of our approach is that it examines which
teaching style turns out to be effective, on average, for teachers in
general. Optimal teaching methods that cannot be executed by teachers in
general may do more harm than good.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
Conclusion
Given the limitations of the data, our finding that spending
increased time on lecture-style teaching improves student test scores
results should not be translated into a call for more lecture-style
teaching in general. But the results do suggest that traditional
lecture-style teaching in U.S. middle schools is less of a problem than
is often believed.
Newer teaching methods might be beneficial for student achievement
if implemented in the proper way, but our findings imply that simply
inducing teachers to shift time in class from lecture-style
presentations to problem solving without ensuring effective
implementation is unlikely to raise overall student achievement in math
and science. On the contrary, our results indicate that there might even
be an adverse impact on student learning.
By GUIDO SCHWERDT and AMELIE C. WUPPERMANN
Guido Schwerdt is a postdoctoral fellow at the Program on Education
Policy and Governance (PEPG) at Harvard University and a researcher at
the Ifo Institute for Economic Research in Munich, Germany. Amelie C.
Wuppermann is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Mainz,
Germany.