Richard Selfridge is a primary school teacher, data consultant and writer on education. His 2018 book for Sage Publications, Databusting for Schools, is an essential guide to the use and interpretation of education data. As well as teaching, working with schools on their use of education data and writing about education, Richard works as a consultant for the Driver Youth Trust supporting inclusion for literacy. A passionate advocate of sensible use of data in schools, Richard was part of ASCL's primary assessment expert panel alongside James, which indirectly lead to James and Richard working together as the Databusters, running workshops across the country and co-hosting the Databusters podcast. In his spare time, Richard can be found hunting follies, usually by bike, or playing, listening to, watching, talking, or thinking about music. He lives in Leeds with his wife Lindsay and daughters Martha and Connie.
Request Academic Copy
Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form
Description
Chapter 1: Databusting for Schools - an introduction to using and interpreting education data Chapter 2: Gathering education data - Where does it come from? Chapter 3: Understanding numerical data in education - the what, how and why of numbers Chapter 4: Understanding variables - the what and how of information Chapter 5: Descriptive statistics - Where are we now? Chapter 6: Inferential statistics - What does the bigger picture look like? Chapter 7: Correlational statistics - Does one thing really lead to another? Chapter 8: Critically appraising statistics - Using what you have learnt Chapter 9: Data-based school research and policy - using data to understand and change education Chapter 10: The data debate - the ongoing discussion about numbers in education
In the increasingly data-swamped world of education, data literacy is no longer a desirable skill, it is essential. Databusting for Schools is part guide through the complexities, uses and limitations of data; and part challenge to those who too readily make assumptions and draw conclusions. This is an important book. -- James Pembroke The use and interpretation of data is increasingly becoming vital in understanding and publicising school results. Whatever our feelings about it might be, all teachers, not just senior leaders, need to get a firm grasp on the subject and this book will help in that...There is a lot of emphasis on practical issues, helping the reader to see how data can be applied - and where things can go wrong. It could be a dry read, but the author makes the subject interesting and relevant. This is a must-read for all teachers, school leaders, data managers and school governors... -- Sarah Brew