Project Activities
In Year 1, the network team will implement CFI+PALS and will use formative input from teachers and students and formative assessments of student progress to (1) optimize the timing and methods for combining CFI and PALS, (2) refine the decision framework for assigning PALS's instructional differentiation topics in ways that optimize support for student success on CFI's fraction content, and (3) modify the PALS decision tool for assigning pairs and topics so the tool relies on formative assessments already available in schools, eliminating the need for teachers to collect more assessment data. In Year 2, the team will make minor adjustments based on implementation with a larger set of end-users, and will conduct a quasi-experimental study to assess the adapted CFI+PALS product's potential to promote acceleration and recovery of student learning, relative to pre-pandemic growth rates. In spring of Year 2, the team will conduct market analyses and interview key stakeholders to prepare to scale the product.
Structured Abstract
Setting
Participating schools include urban and suburban Title I schools in Maryland.
Sample
In Year 1, four fifth grade teachers across two schools and their students will participate in the research. In Year 2, 40 fifth grade teachers and their students (20 schools, with two fifth grade classrooms per school) will participate. At least 50% of students within the participating schools are scoring below proficient on state math assessments. The research team will also interview district and school administrators as well as stakeholders external to the study districts.
Classwide Fraction Intervention (CFI) + Math Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS). CFI is an evidence-based program for improving fraction performance. It addresses the need to accelerate learning by helping learners achieve grade-level standards. PALS is an evidence-based classroom program with an adaptive decision framework to assign PALS partners and topics. It supports teachers' peer-mediated instructional differentiation on a broad set of math topics, addressing the increased need for instructional differentiation to support student learning on content covered in prior grades. Both CFI and PALS rely on structured peer-guided rehearsal and math conversations, which address the need to build social networks.
Research design and methods
The project activities are designed to meet three aims: (1) design three adaptations to CFI and PALS and implement adapted, combined CFI+PALS to ensure its scalability and effects on student learning, (2) assess CFI+PALS's potential to accelerate learning via a quasi-experimental study, and (3) prepare to scale CFI+PALS. To address Aim 1, the team will collect formative input from teachers, students, and other stakeholders and formative assessments of student progress to iteratively design adaptations: (1) optimizing the design, timing, and pacing of the combined program, (2) refining the decision framework for assigning PALS's instructional differentiation topics to optimize support for student success with CFI's fraction content, and (3) modifying the PALS decision framework to rely on already-available assessments to drive instructional differentiation. To address Aim 2, the team will conduct a quasi-experimental study with 10 Cohort 2 schools and a comparison group of similar schools in the same districts. To address Aim 3, the team will interview stakeholders in districts outside the study districts and conduct a market analysis to develop a plan for scaling CFI+PALS.
Cost analysis strategy
The network team will collect and summarize cost per student and cost-effectiveness data., They will estimate costs for startup versus maintenance, and quantify costs based on rates of growth on district interim assessment relative to pre-pandemic rates of growth.
People and institutions involved
IES program contact(s)
Project contributors
Products and publications
Products will include (1) a CFI+PALS manual that explains how to implement CFI and PALS in coordinated fashion, the contextual features needed to implement CFI+PALS, and the PALS decision tool that relies on available assessments for instructional differentiation; (2) peer-reviewed publications that describe the evidence of CFI+PALS's potential to accelerate math learning relative to pre-pandemic rates of growth; and (3) and a plan for scaling. The manual and project findings will be disseminated to a diverse audience, prioritizing policymakers and practitioners, through websites, social media, research briefs, conferences, and journal articles.
Additional project information
This project is part of the Leveraging Evidence to Accelerate Recovery Nationwide (LEARN) Network, which focuses on adapting and preparing to scale existing, evidence-based products that have the potential to accelerate students' learning relative to pre-pandemic rates of growth for the many learners enrolled in kindergarten through grade 12, postsecondary education, or adult education programs whose learning was affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Questions about this project?
To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.