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Grant Closed

Building Preschool Children's Complex Language Using Informational Texts

NCER
Program: Education Research Grants
Program topic(s): Early Learning Programs and Policies
Award amount: $1,393,595
Principal investigator: Allison Breit
Awardee:
University of Cincinnati
Year: 2020
Award period: 4 years (09/01/2020 - 08/31/2024)
Project type:
Development and Innovation
Award number: R305A200271

Purpose

The purpose of this project is to teach complex language skills (that is, how to use information to draw inferences, use and understand syntactic/semantic relationships, and use and understand academic vocabulary) to preschool-age children during interactive book reading, mapping, and hands-on activities using informational texts.

Project Activities

Researchers will carry out three lines of activity. First, they will fully develop an informational text program and all of its components (instructional objectives, sequence, teaching strategies, activities and materials, dosage, and professional development). These components will be embedded in three, 9-week modules focused on three science topics, Module 1: Life Science; Module 2: Earth Science; Module 3: Physical Science. Next, they will test the feasibility of each module in an authentic educational setting. Finally, they will assess the promise of the full 27-week informational text program in a pilot study using a small-scale multisite cluster-randomized design. During the pilot study, they will analyze the full range of costs associate with implementing the proposed informational text program.

Structured Abstract

Setting

The project will be implemented in preschool classrooms in Ohio and Kentucky.

Sample

The total sample size for this project includes 39 preschool teachers and 234 children. Three teachers and 18 children (6 per classroom) will be recruited for each module in Phases 1 and 2 to field test the program (total: 9 classrooms and 54 children). In Phase 3, we will pilot the program with 30 classrooms across 15 schools with a total of 180 preschool children.

Intervention

Lead preschool teachers will read the same developmentally appropriate informational text three times per week (two times in whole group; one time in small group) and map relationships within the text two times each week as well as engage children in a hands-on activity related to the text one time each week. Teachers will use language facilitation strategies (i.e., ask open-ended and direct questions, breakdown clauses and elicit buildups, provide verbal definitions and elicit examples, extend children's utterances and provide hints) embedded in strategically planned discussions for targeting and building children's complex language skills. Teachers implementing the program will also participate in professional development consisting of an online introductory presentation, three face-to-face workshops per module, three in-class coaching sessions, and oral/written feedback on submitted videos six times.

Research design and methods

In this study, researchers will use an iterative process that includes development, implementation, and revision of Modules 1, 2, and 3 during the first two phases of the project. In the final phase, researchers will conduct a small-scale multisite cluster-randomized pilot study to determine the promise of the full informational text program.

Control condition

Teachers in the control condition will conduct business as usual.

Key measures

Researchers will measure child and teacher outcomes of the informational text program using both standardized and research-based measures. Prior to and at the conclusion of the program, they will assess children's complex language skills (ability to use information to draw inferences, use and understand complex syntactic/semantic relationships, use and understand academic vocabulary), and engagement and teachers' knowledge of complex language and informational texts, feelings of self-efficacy, and quality of book reading interactions.

Data analytic strategy

The researchers will analyze data during the development process using qualitative approaches. Qualitative methods will include focus groups, field notes, and structured interviews. They will analyze data from the pilot study using quantitative methods. Quantitative methods will include descriptive statistics and multivariate, multilevel modeling for measuring the informational text program's impacts on child- and teacher-level outcomes.

Cost analysis strategy

Using the Ingredients Method, the project team will analyze the full range of costs associate with implementing the proposed informational text program.

People and institutions involved

IES program contact(s)

Amy Sussman

Education Research Analyst
NCSER

Project contributors

Ying Guo

Co-principal investigator

Benjamin Kelcey

Co-principal investigator

Products and publications

Products: The products of this project will include a fully developed informational text program and evidence of promise. Researchers will share findings in conference proceedings and peer-reviewed publications.

Questions about this project?

To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.

 

Tags

Early childhood educationLanguage

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Questions about this project?

To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.

 

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