Testing the efficacy of a kindergarten mathematics intervention by small group size

Bibliographic Data

Author(s)
Clarke, B., Doabler, C. T., Kosty, D., Kurtz Nelson, E., Smolkowski, K., Fien, H., & Turtura, J.
Year of Study
2017
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.

Research Design

Study Design
Quantitative
Methodology
Randomized Controlled Trial
Subject
Math
Grade Level(s)
Kindergarten
Sample size
345
Effect Size
0.35

Program Details

Program Name

ROOTS

Program Evaluated

ROOTS

Tutor Type
Paraprofessional
Duration
10 weeks
Student-Tutor Ratio
2