The effects of in-school virtual tutoring on student reading development: Evidence from a short-cycle randomized controlled trial

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
Ready, D. D., McCormick, S. G., & Shmoys, R. J.
Year of Study
2024
Publication
EdWorkingPapers.com
This paper describes a 12-week cluster randomized controlled trial that examined the efficacy of BookNook, a virtual tutoring platform focused on reading. Cohorts of first- through fourth-grade students attending six Rocketship public charter schools in Northern California were randomly assigned within grades to receive BookNook. Intent-to-Treat models indicate that students in cohorts assigned to BookNook outperformed their control-group peers by roughly 0.05 SDs. Given the substantial variability in usage rates among students enrolled in BookNook cohorts, we also leveraged Treatment-on-the-Treated approaches. These models suggest that students who completed 10 or more BookNook sessions experienced a reading advantage of 0.08 SDs, while those who completed 20 or more sessions—the recommended dosage—experienced a 0.26 SD developmental advantage.

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Reading
Grade Level(s)
1st Grade,
2nd Grade,
3rd Grade,
4th Grade
Sample size
1777
Effect Size
ITT: 0.052, larger effects for students who read more

Program Details

Program Name

BookNook

Tutor Type
Mostly teachers (avg. 3 yrs teaching)
Duration
2-3x 30 mins/wk, 12 wks.
Student-Tutor Ratio
1:1