The effects of strategic counting instruction, with and without deliberate practice, on number combination skill among students with mathematics difficulties

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
Fuchs, L. S., Powell, S. R., Seethaler, P. M., Cirino, P. T., Fletcher, J. M., Fuchs, D., & Hamlett, C. L.
Year of Study
2010
The primary purpose of this study was to assess the effects of strategic counting instruction, with and without deliberate practice with those counting strategies, on number combination (NC) skill among students with mathematics difficulties (MD). Students (n = 150) were stratified on MD status (i.e., MD alone vs. MD with reading difficulty) and site (proximal vs. distal to the intervention developer) and then randomly assigned to control (no tutoring) or 1 of 2 variants of NC remediation. Both remediations were embedded in the same validated word-problem tutoring protocol (i.e., Pirate Math). In 1 variant, the focus on NCs was limited to a single lesson that taught strategic counting. In the other variant, 4–6 min of practice per session was added to the other variant. Tutoring occurred for 16 weeks, 3 sessions per week for 20–30 min per session. Strategic counting without deliberate practice produced superior NC fluency compared to control; however, strategic counting with deliberate practice effected superior NC fluency and transfer to procedural calculations compared with both competing conditions. Also, the efficacy of Pirate Math word-problem tutoring was replicated.

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Math
Grade Level(s)
3rd Grade
Sample size
100
Effect Size
0.61

Program Details

Program Evaluated

Strategic counting instruction

Tutor Type
Paraprofessional
Duration
16 weeks
Student-Tutor Ratio
1