Collective Student Efficacy
Developing Independent and Inter-Dependent Learners
- John Hattie - The University of Melbourne, Australia
- Douglas Fisher - San Diego State University, USA
- Nancy Frey - San Diego State University, USA
- Shirley Clarke - Shirley Clarke Education LLC
Corwin Teaching Essentials
Teaching Methods & Learning Styles
Arm students with the confidence they need to pursue ambitious goals—together.
Collective student efficacy— students’ beliefs that by working with other people, they will learn more—can be a powerful accelerator of student learning and a precursor to future employment success.
Harnessing twenty-five years of VISIBLE LEARNING® research, Collective Student Efficacy: Developing Independent and Inter-Dependent Learners illuminates the power of collective efficacy and identifies the many ways teachers can activate collective efficacy with their students. More than cooperative and collaborative learning, collective efficacy requires the refinement of both individual and collective tasks that build on each other over time. This innovative book details how knowledge, skills, and dispositions entangle to create collective and individual beliefs, and leads educators to mobilize collective efficacy in the classroom. It includes:
The time is now to prepare students to meet the demands of the future. Through collective student efficacy, students will learn to become actionable agents of learning and change.
Free resources
Collaborative Learning for Equity
Student learning communities give all students access to deeper learning.
The “I” and “We” Skills Needed for Collective Student Efficacy
Co-authors of Collective Student Efficacy John Hattie, Douglas Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Shirley Clarke share the “I” and “We” skills that teachers need to develop to make student collaboration powerful and valuable.
Doug Fisher & John Hattie: Collective Student Efficacy
Join Collective Student Efficacy co-authors Douglas Fisher and John Hattie to harness the power of collective efficacy to accelerate students’ learning and learn the essentials of task design, skill development, assessment, and shared definitions of success.
Peer Conversation Stems
Download these Peer Conversation Stems from Collective Student Efficacy by John Hattie, Doug Fisher, Nancy Frey, and Shirley Clarke.