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Home Publications Impacts of Home Visits on Students in District of Columbia Public Schools

Impacts of Home Visits on Students in District of Columbia Public Schools

by Allison McKie, Jeffrey Terziev and Brian Gill

This study examined the impacts of structured relationship-building teacher home visits conducted in grades 1–5 as part of a family engagement program in the District of Columbia Public Schools. Using a matched comparison group research design, the study measured the impacts of the home visits on student disciplinary incidents and attendance. The study found that a home visit before the start of the school year reduced the likelihood of a student having a disciplinary incident in that school year. During the school year following a home visit, 9.27 percent of visited students had a disciplinary incident compared with 12.22 percent of nonvisited comparison students. The study also found that, on average, a home visit slightly improved student attendance. The attendance rate averaged 95.28 percent for visited students and 94.93 percent for nonvested comparison students.

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Mid-Atlantic | Publication Type: Impact Study | Publication
Date: December 2021

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