Published October 26, 2020 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Longitudinally adaptive assessment and instruction increase numerical skills of preschool children

Description

Social inequality in mathematical skill is apparent at kindergarten entry and persists during elementary school. To level the playing field, we trained teachers to assess children's numerical and spatial skills every 10 wk. Each assessment provided teachers with information about a child's growth trajectory on each skill, information designed to help them evaluate their students' progress, reflect on past instruction, and strategize for the next phase of instruction. A key constraint is that teachers have limited time to assess individual students. To maximize the information provided by an assessment, we adapted the difficulty of each assessment based on each child's age and accumulated evidence about the child's skills. Children in classrooms of 24 trained teachers scored 0.29 SD higher on numerical skills at posttest than children in 25 randomly assigned control classrooms (P = 0.005). We observed no effect on spatial skills. The intervention also positively influenced children's verbal comprehension skills (0.28 SD higher at posttest, P < 0.001), but did not affect their print-literacy skills. We consider the potential contribution of this approach, in combination with similar regimes of assessment and instruction in elementary schools, to the reduction of social inequality in numerical skill and discuss possible explanations for the absence of an effect on spatial skills.

Data availability

Some study data are available upon request.

Files

raudenbush-et-al-2020-longitudinally-adaptive-assessment-and-instruction-increase-numerical-skills-of-preschool-children.pdf

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2002883117
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:9697

Funding

Heising-Simons Foundation
Getting on Track for School Success

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Harris School of Public Policy Studies, Social Sciences Division
Department(s)
Education, Psychology, Sociology, Harris School of Public Policy Studies Research Publications
Center(s) or Institute(s)
UChicago STEM Education