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Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS) is a peer-tutoring program. According to the developer's website, it is designed to be incorporated into the existing curriculum with the goal of improving the academic performance of children with diverse academic needs. Teachers train students to use PALS procedures. Students partner with peers, alternating the role of tutor while reading aloud, listening, and providing feedback in various structured activities. PALS is typically implemented three times a week for 30 to 35 minutes. Although PALS can be used in different subject areas and grade levels, this intervention report focuses on the use of PALS to improve reading skills of students in kindergarten through third grade. 2
Four studies of Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies met the What Works Clearinghouse (WWC) evidence standards with reservations. The four studies included more than 360 students from first to third grades in the United States. 3 The WWC considers the extent of evidence for PALS to small for alphabetics, fluency, and comprehension. The WWC considers the extent of evidence for PALS to be medium to large for alphabetics and small for fluency and comprehension. No studies that met WWC evidence standards with or without reservations addressed general reading achievement.
PALS was found to have potentially positive effects on alphabetics, fluency, and comprehension.
| Alphabetics | Fluency | Comprehension | General reading achievement | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rating of effectiveness | Potentially positive effects | Potentially positive effects | Potentially positive effects | na |
| Improvement index4 | Average: +19 percentile points Range: –15 to +45 percentile points |
Average: +13 percentile points Range: –8 to +31 percentile points |
Average: +13 percentile points Range: –17 to +28 percentile points |
na |
| na = not applicable | ||||