Bibliographic Data
Year of Study
2022
Publication
EdWorkingPapers.com
A substantial body of experimental evidence demonstrates that in-person tutoring programs can have large impacts on K-12 student achievement. However, such programs typically are costly and constrained by a limited local supply of tutors. In partnership with CovEducation (CovEd), we conduct a pilot program that has potential to ease both of these concerns. We conduct an experiment where volunteer tutors from all over the country meet 1-on-1 with middle school students online during the school day. We find that the program produces consistently positive (0.07σ for math and 0.04σ for reading) but statistically insignificant effects on student achievement. While these estimates are notably smaller than those found in many higher-dosage in-person tutoring programs, they are from a significantly lower-cost program that was delivered within the challenging context of the COVID-19 pandemic. We provide evidence that is consistent with a dosage model of tutoring where additional hours result in larger effects.
Research Design
Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Math
Reading
Grade Level(s)
6th Grade,
7th Grade,
8th Grade
Sample size
560
Effect Size
ITT 0.053 SD, TOT 0.066 SD
Program Details
Program Name
CovEducation
Program Evaluated
Math and Literacy tutoring during the pandemic
Tutor Type
College students
Duration
12 weeks, 2 x 30 minute sessions/wk
Student-Tutor Ratio
1:1