Investigating the Longitudinal Effects of a Core Mathematics Program on Evidence-Based Teaching Practices in Mathematics
Author(s) -
Christian T. Doabler,
Nancy J. Nelson,
Patrick C. Kennedy,
Mike Stoolmiller,
Hank Fien,
Ben Clarke,
Brian Gearin,
Keith Smolkowski,
Scott Baker
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
learning disability quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.994
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 2168-376X
pISSN - 0731-9487
DOI - 10.1177/0731948718756040
Subject(s) - mathematics education , core (optical fiber) , common core , teaching method , psychology , computer science , telecommunications
Accumulating research has established explicit mathematics instruction as an evidence-based teaching practice. This study utilized observation data from a multi-year efficacy trial to examine the longitudinal effects of a core kindergarten mathematics program on the use of explicit mathematics instruction among two distinct groups of teachers: one group that used standard practices in Year 1 of the efficacy trial and the core program in Year 2, and a second group that used the core program in both years. Targeted teaching practices consisted of teacher models, student practice opportunities, and teacher-provided academic feedback. Implementation of the program in Year 2 was found to increase the mean rates of teaching practices of teachers who used standard teaching practices in Year 1. Effect sizes are also suggestive of a positive impact of a second year of implementation with the core program. Implications for designing explicit mathematics programs and investigating evidence-based practices in future research are discussed.
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