For example, schools with predominantly Irish background don't have data that looks like Irish schools.
there's strong evidence that smaller classroom size really does help a lot with performance across a wide variety of subjects.
Could you point to this data?
As to your anecdote, how long-term were your tutoring relationships? The post Razib quotes is all about about how everyone fools themselves into thinking that they were much better than the students' previous teachers. On the other hand, if the students could learn the material once, maybe there is a scenario in which they could retain it. So I wouldn't be terribly surprised if they did, but how do you assign credit to your having "taught well"? One difference between tutoring and school teaching is that some tutoring is for prerequisites that the student now has to use and has motivation to learn and gets a lot of practice on.
everyone fools themselves into thinking that they were much better than the students' previous teachers.
I'm friends with a couple of teachers--some of them are more excited about it than others, and those that are less excited aren't fooling themselves. I'd guess there's a large amount of sampling bias here, in that teachers who write about their problems and education policy tend to care more than teachers who don't. I would guess that that would lead them both to be better teachers AND to be more motivated to convince themselves they were better.
Post by fellow LW reader Razib Khan, who many here probably know from the gnxp site or perhaps from his debate with Eliezer.