The ERRR podcast can also be listened to on Spotify, apple podcasts, and all other podcasting apps. 

This ERRR podcast with Daniel Willingham is very much in line with a theme of the ERRR over 2018, and that theme is ‘evaluating research evidence’. In this episode we discuss his 2012 book ‘When Can You Trust the Experts’, How to tell good science from bad in education research. I won’t give away too much just now but I know that you’re going to love to hear about the creative ways that Dan encourages readers to approach, and critique, educational research when they’re trying to separate fact from fiction.

Daniel has a PhD in Cognitive Psychology from Harvard University and is currently Professor of Psychology at the Univsity of Virginia. His current research focuses on the application of cognitive psychology to k-16 education and he’s written a whole host of fantastic books on this topic, and more. He’s the author of my equal favourite education book ‘Why Don’t Students Like School?’, and has also written ‘Raising Kids Who Read, and ‘The Reading Mind’. He also authors the ‘Ask the Cognitive Scientist’ column for the American Educator magazine and has churned out some fantastic articles through that column that I absolutely love.

Links mentioned in the show

My PDF summary of Dan's book can be found here.

Please consider supporting the Education Research Reading Room Podcast

If you're keen to help the ERRR podcast to stay independent and sustainable, please consider making a one-off or monthly donation through https://www.patreon.com/errr. Audio engineering, room hire, and audio-file web hosting cost Ollie upward of $70 per episode, and any donation (even as much as a cup of coffee), to help cover these costs is greatly appreciated : )

Listen to all past episodes of the ERRR podcast here.