Difference between revisions of "ANOVA Case study"
TaniaNicole (talk | contribs) (ANOVA Test used to compare students who took test early vs later in a multi-day test period) |
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Mouritsen, M. L.; Davis, J. T.; Jones, S. C. (2016). Journal of Learning in Higher Education: ANOVA Analysis of Student Daily Test Scores in Multi-Day Test Periods, v12 n2 p73-82 (EJ1139744) | Mouritsen, M. L.; Davis, J. T.; Jones, S. C. (2016). Journal of Learning in Higher Education: ANOVA Analysis of Student Daily Test Scores in Multi-Day Test Periods, v12 n2 p73-82 (EJ1139744) | ||
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Revision as of 14:58, 18 April 2022
One of the great challenges affecting suburban school districts is staffing and space issues as it relates to Kindergarten. Many kindergarten programs in Connecticut are still half day, challenging those teachers to cover an ever-increasing curriculum in a short amount of time.
What about those students who struggle? How are they not "left behind" in an increasingly rigorous educational setting? One administrator attempted to address this issue by starting a Kindergarten "Buddy Program." The buddy program was an extended day program for those students at risk that took place after the first kindergarten session. Those students had intensive work for approximately 1 hour and then were bused home. This was a potential cost-effective solution. To see if is was an effective instructional strategy, a posttest was given to subjects in three settings (those of the Kindergarten buddy program, those in a traditional half day kindergarten program, and those in a full-day kindergarten program. A description of the assessment is provided below:
contributed by Frank LaBanca, EdD
Gates-MacGinitie Reading Test: Level PR (Pre-Reading)
Paper-Pencil version only Find info about the G-M Reading Test here [1]
Designed to help teachers discover what students at the end of Kindergarten and students at the beginning Grade 1 know about important background concepts upon which beginning reading skills are built.
Subtest 1, Literacy Concepts, evaluates students' understanding of the nature and uses of written English and their understanding of words and phrases commonly used in beginning reading instruction.
Subtest 2, Oral Language Concepts (Phonological Awareness), evaluates students' abilities to attend to the basic structure of spoken English words, especially to phonemic units (speech sounds), which are the basis of the alphabetic principle and much beginning reading instruction.
Subtest 3, Letters and Letter/Sound Correspondences, evaluates students' knowledge of letters and their abilities to relate them to sounds.
Subtest 4, Listening (Story) Comprehension, evaluates students' abilities to understand important elements of connected text. Designed for nonreaders, answer choices for Level PR predominantly consist of pictures.
contributed by Frank LaBanca, EdD