Educational Achievement Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Life Chances of Disadvantaged Youth: Testing Best-Practice Academic vs. Non-Academic Supports Through a Large-Scale Randomized Control Trial in Chicago
The purpose of this study is to learn more about the most cost-effective way to improve the long-term life outcomes of disadvantaged youth, by comparing best practice academic supports to best-practice non-academic supports, and learning more about whether investing in both simultaneously has synergistic (more than additive) effects.
Our University of Chicago Crime Lab research team will carry out a 2 x 2 randomized
experiment, in which some male youth are randomly assigned to receive what we believe to be
best-practice intensive academic supports (high-dosage math tutoring provided by Match
Education of Boston), or what we believe to be best-practice non-academic supports, for which
we have identified Youth Guidance's Becoming a Man (BAM) program that provides a version of
cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), or to receive both, or neither (control condition).
The University of Chicago Education Lab research team will be carrying out a randomized
controlled trial of this promising academic intervention during both the 2013-14 and 2014-15
academic years in partnership with the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and Match Education.
The BAM intervention is a version of CBT adapted to help promote pro-social life outcomes
among disadvantaged male youth. BAM includes in-school and after school programming designed
to reduce overly-automatic behavior that can lead to problem outcomes, encourage youth to
reflect on their decision-making heuristics, or promote meta-cognition (to "think about
thinking"). By helping youth learn and practice new ways to manage their emotional responses
to difficult situations through stories, role-playing, small group exercises, and homework,
the program encourages what psychologists call "cognitive restructuring," designed to
generate lasting gains in youths' behaviors. BAM is a program of Youth Guidance (YG), a
Chicago-area non-profit that has been serving Chicago children for over 80 years, and
currently provides services to thousands of students across more than 70 schools through a
partnership with the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) that dates back more than four decades. YG
will implement the BAM intervention during the 2013-15 academic years in some of the most
distressed schools in Chicago's south and west sides.
The Match Tutors program expands on the nationally recognized innovation of high-dosage,
in-school-day tutoring developed in the three Match Charter Public Schools in Boston.
Tutoring is embedded into the school day as an elective class, as a supplement to the regular
classroom math teacher. Every student works with a full-time, professional tutor in addition
to their other classes, so that the class offered by Match Tutors will be given for credit,
not as a pull-out or after school intervention As a regular part of their school day,
students will attend tutoring for 50 minutes a day, 5 days a week. The tutoring course,
entitled Mathematics Lab, has been granted credit-bearing status by CPS and will be offered
each semester within a school year so that students will earn one elective credit upon
completion of the course. Math Lab offers a standards-based curriculum that is individualized
to each student's needs with the goal of complementing the work done in math classes -
preparing students for city and state math assessments, enabling them to pass math class
finals, and helping students build skills and habits of learning that will help them succeed
in school and beyond.
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