I imagine that things like this could be experimentally measured using Khan Academy style education.
Ask teams of teachers to create different video lessons explaining X. Take a lot of students, assign them randomly to different lessons. After lessons, give them tests. Measure how good they were at tests. Choose the best lessons and reward the authors. Use those lessons for education, and once in a while announce a new competition.
Unfortunately, teaching in person cannot be replicated as well as video teaching. It is difficult to copy a teacher, so even if one teacher has a lot of success using some specific method, it does not mean others will have the same success when trying the same thing.
Ask teams of teachers to create different video lessons explaining X.
That accepts basic premises about education that I don't think make sense. I don't think that there any basis to believe that video explaining something are a time effective way of learning something. The same goes for straight lecturing of information.
Children don't learn their native language because their parents explain them how it works.
On the level of making education policy the easist thing would be to simple get rid of the curriculum and let every school teach what they consi...
The soon-to-be-resigning Dominic Cummings, advisor to the Education Secretary of the Coalition government, has released a 250-page manifesto describing the problems of the British educational establishment ("the blob" in Whitehall parlance) and offering solutions. I post this here because both his analysis and recommendations are likely to be interesting to LW, in particular an increased emphasis on STEM, broader knowledge of the limits of human reasoning and how they relate to managing complex systems, an appreciation for "agenty"-ness in organizational leadership, whole-brain emulation, intelligence enhancement, recursive self-improving AGI, analysis of human interactions on a firm evolutionary-psychological basis, and a rejection of fashionable pseudoscientific theories of psychology and society. Relevant extracts: