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ClassWide Peer Tutoring (CWPT) is a peer-assisted instructional strategy designed to be integrated with most existing reading curricula. This approach provides students with increased opportunities to practice reading skills by asking questions and receiving immediate feedback from a peer tutor. Pairs of students take turns tutoring each other to reinforce concepts and skills initially taught by the teacher. The teacher creates age-appropriate peer teaching materials for the peer tutors; these materials take into account tutees' language skills and disabilities. Although CWPT can be used in subject areas other than reading, this report focuses on CWPT for beginning reading for elementary school grade levels, which emphasizes reading fluency and comprehension skills. 2
One study of CWPT met the What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) evidence standards. The study included more than 200 students from six urban elementary schools in Kansas. 3
The WWC considers the extent of evidence for CWPT to be small in the general reading achievement domain. No studies that met WWC evidence standards with or without reservations addressed alphabetics, fluency, or comprehension.
CWPT was found to have potentially positive effects on general reading achievement.
| Alphabetics | Fluency | Comprehension | General reading achievement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rating of effectiveness | na | na | na | Potentially positive |
| Improvement index4 | na | na | na | +14 percentile points |
| na = not applicable | ||||