The Impact of the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) Program on Student Reading Achievement
NCEE
Author(s):
David Cordray Vanderbilt and Georgine Pion: Vanderbilt University; Chris Brandt and Ayrin Molefe: REL Midwest; Megan Toby: Empirical Education
Publication date:
December 2012
Publication number:
NCEE 20134000
Summary
This study examined the impact of the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) program on student reading achievement and teachers' use of differentiated instructional practices. The MAP program is one of the most widely used commercially available systems incorporating benchmark assessment and training in differentiated instruction. MAP includes computer-adaptive assessments administered to students three or four times a year and teacher training and access to MAP resources on how to use data from these assessments to differentiate instruction. The study used a randomized design and involved 32 elementary schools in five districts in Illinois. The study found no impacts of MAP on student reading achievement or on teachers' use of differentiated instructional practices.
Download, view, and print
Evaluation Report
NCEE
The Impact of the Measures of Academic Progress (MAP) Program on Student Reading Achievement
By:David Cordray Vanderbilt and Georgine Pion: Vanderbilt University; Chris Brandt and Ayrin Molefe: REL Midwest; Megan Toby: Empirical Education