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What randomized trials have taught us about what works and doesn’t work in education Jon Baron Coalition for Evidence-Based Policy December 9, 2003. Age 0-4. Abecedarian project : High-quality, educational child care & preschool for low-income children. Randomized trial of 111 children. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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What randomized trials have taught us about what works and doesn’t work in
education
Jon BaronCoalition for Evidence-Based Policy
December 9, 2003
Age 0-4
Abecedarian project: High-quality, educational child care & preschool for low-income children. Randomized trial of 111 children.
At age 15, reduces special education placements and grade retentions by nearly 50%;
At age 21, more than doubles the proportion attending four-year college and reduces the percentage of teenage parents by 44%. Raises reading 1.8 grade levels, math 1.3 grade levels.
School-age treatment alone had much smaller effect.
Age 0-4
Perry Preschool Study: High-quality preschool for low-income children. Randomized trial of 123 children. At age 27 follow-up: increases percentage with high school
diploma by 31% reduces percentage on welfare by 26% Reduces percentage of hard-core criminals
by 80%.
Age 0-4
Infant Health & Development Program: Intensive child development for kids age 0-3 born prematurely, low-birthweight. At age 8, effect is only on the children heavier at
birth -- 4 point increase in IQ, 38% decrease in special education, improved math/vocabulary
Early Head Start: Child development & parenting services for low-income families with infants. At age 3, 10-15% decrease in kids scoring “at
risk” in cognitive development & receptive vocabulary, 15% decrease in mothers having subsequent births.
Age 0-4
Even Start family literacy program for low-income families. Focus is on coordinating family access to existing literacy services (e.g., Head Start).
Randomized trial of 200 families. At 18-month follow-up, no effect on literacy
outcomes of children or adults.
Grades K-6
1-on-1 tutoring of at-risk readers by trained tutors (avg tutored student reads more proficiently than ~ 75% of controls).
Instruction for early readers in phonemic awareness and phonics (the avg student in these interventions reads more proficiently than ~ 70% of controls).
Reducing class size in grades K-3 (the avg student in small classes scores higher on the Stanford Achievement Test in reading/math than 60% of controls).
Grades K-6
21st Century Community Learning Centers -- provides after-school academic and recreational activities in mostly high-poverty schools. Randomized trial of 1000 elementary school
students. At 1-yr follow-up, no effect on grades or test scores,
student effort (e.g., homework completion), or behavioral problems.
Vouchers for disadvantaged youth (K-4) for private school. Trial of >2000 children. At year 3: No overall impact in math/reading scores; Possible impact for African American students. Parents report much higher satisfaction w/ school.
Middle and High School
Between-class ability grouping in middle and high schools (students in a particular grade are grouped into separate classes by ability level and taught variations on the same curriculum). 10 randomized trials: No overall effect on
achievement.
Joplin plan (which groups students across grades by ability level and uses curricula that are fitted to each group’s ability). 2 small randomized trials: Avg student in the intervention scores higher
than ~60% of the students in the control group.
Middle and High School
Big Brothers Big Sisters (matches adult mentors with disadvantaged youths age 11-13). Randomized trial of 1100 youths. At 18-month follow-up – Reduced initiation of drug use by 46%; Reduced initiation of alcohol use by 27%; Reduced days skipped school by 52%.
Job Corps (academic & vocational training for disadvantaged youths age 16-24). Randomized trial of >10,000 youths. At 4-year follow-up: Increased earnings by 8% Decreased welfare/food stamps by 11% Reduce number arrested by 12% No effect on substance abuse or childbearing.
Middle and High SchoolUpward Bound (provides instruction, tutoring, counseling starting 9-10 grade). Randomized trial of 2800 students. At 2-3 year follow-up: No effect on high school graduation rates, or % attending
college But some modest effects on lower-income & poorer-
performing students (~ 2 high school credits).
U.S. ED’s dropout prevention programs (varying interventions for students at-risk of dropping out). Randomized trial of >10,000 students. At 2-3 yr followup: Middle schools providing supplemental services (tutorg,
classes) had no effect on dropout rates or achievement; Middle schools providing alternative schools or schools
w/in school reduced dropout rate 18 to 9%; Alternative high schools had no effect on dropout rate.
Middle and High SchoolCareer Academies (provide academic/technical courses in small communities, career theme, partnership with local employers). Randomized trial of 1700 8th/9th graders. No effect on high school graduation rate or enrollment
in post-secondary education at 4-year follow-up. Jim Kemple will discuss 8-year follow-up.
Summer Training & Employment Program (provides summer jobs & academic classes to disadvged 14-15 yr olds). Randomized trial of 2600 youths: Only short-term academic impact at end of summer. At 1-year, no effects on academic scores, dropout rate,
college attendance, teen pregnancy, employment.
Substance-Abuse Prevention Programs
Life-skills training (reduces smoking by 20% and serious levels of substance abuse by 30% by end of high school).
DARE is ineffective in reducing substance use, according to randomized trials (now being redesigned).