Professor Dylan Wiliam
Dylan Wiliam is Deputy Director of the Institute of Education,
London. After a first degree in mathematics and physics, and one
year teaching in a private school, he taught in inner-city schools
for seven years, during which time he earned further degrees in
mathematics and mathematics education.
In 1984 he joined Chelsea College, University of London, which
later became part of King's College London. During this time he
worked on developing innovative assessment schemes in mathematics
before taking over the leadership of the mathematics teacher
education program at King’s.
Between 1989 and 1991 he was the academic coordinator of the
Consortium for Assessment and Testing in Schools, which developed a
variety of statutory and non-statutory assessments for the national
curriculum of England and Wales.
After his return to King’s, he completed his PhD, addressing
some of the technical issues thrown up by the adoption of a system
of age-independent criterion-referenced levels of attainment in the
national curriculum of England and Wales.
From 1996 to 2001 he was the dean and head of the School of
Education at King’s College London, and from 2001 to 2003, he
served as Assistant Principal of the college. In 2003 he moved to
the USA, as Senior Research Director of the Learning and Teaching
Research Center at the Educational Testing Service in Princeton,
NJ.
His recent work has focused on the use of assessment to support
learning (sometimes called formative assessment). He was the
co-author, with Paul Black of a major review of the research
evidence on formative assessment published in 1998 and has
subsequently worked with many groups of teachers, in both the UK
and the USA, on developing formative assessment practices.
A champion of formative assessment and a commanding and
entertaining speaker, Professor Williams is passionate about
raising standards by helping students become better learners.