Testing the Efficacy of a Kindergarten Mathematics Intervention by Small Group Size
Author(s) -
Ben Clarke,
Christian T. Doabler,
Derek Kosty,
Evangeline Kurtz Nelson,
Keith Smolkowski,
Hank Fien,
Jessica Turtura
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aera open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2332-8584
DOI - 10.1177/2332858417706899
Subject(s) - treatment and control groups , intervention (counseling) , curriculum , mathematics education , randomized controlled trial , psychology , group (periodic table) , mathematics , pedagogy , medicine , statistics , chemistry , surgery , organic chemistry , psychiatry
This study used a randomized controlled trial design to investigate the ROOTS curriculum, a 50-lesson kindergarten mathematics intervention. Ten ROOTS-eligible students per classroom (n = 60) were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: a ROOTS five-student group, a ROOTS two-student group, and a no-treatment control group. Two primary research questions were investigated as part of this study: What was the overall impact of the treatment (the ROOTS intervention) as compared with the control (business as usual)? Was there a differential impact on student outcomes between the two treatment conditions (two- vs. five-student group)? Initial analyses for the first research question indicated a significant impact on three outcomes and positive but nonsignificant impacts on three additional measures. Results for the second research question, comparing the two- and five-student groups, indicated negligible and nonsignificant differences. Implications for practice are discussed
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