Educational Achievement Clinical Trial
This research aims to continue to study the effectiveness of a promising academic intervention (implemented by SAGA Innovations) that has previously been shown to significantly improve academic outcomes for disadvantaged youth. In addition, this study will begin to investigate the effects of scaling up this promising strategy by exploring variation in tutor effectiveness and the optimal instructor-student and student-student pairings for improving academic outcomes.
The University of Chicago Education Lab research team is carrying out a randomized controlled
trial of a promising academic intervention during the 2015-16 academic year in partnership
with the Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and SAGA Innovations. Male and female CPS students in
grades 9 and 10 will be randomly assigned either to receive what investigators believe to be
a best-practice intensive academic support, or to a control group receiving status quo CPS
and community services, for one academic year (AY2015-16). The intervention is high-dosage
math tutoring provided by SAGA Innovations (previously Match Education of Boston). A previous
randomized controlled trial conducted by the University of Chicago research team found that
one year of this intervention, delivered in AY2013-14, generated between one and two extra
years of academic growth in math, over and above what the normal U.S. high school student
learns in one year. The estimated effects for math achievement are on the order of 0.19 to
0.30 SD, depending on the exact test and norming used. The intervention also improved student
grades in math, by 0.58 points on a 1-4 grade scale, compared to a control mean of 1.77.
These gains are particularly important because math success versus failure is a strong
predictor of high school graduation.
This current study aims to replicate the investigators' previous findings, and to that end
the research team will again look at the academic, behavioral, and long-term effects of this
high-dosage math tutoring program on youth. This study is also designed to explore issues
that will be central to efforts to scale-up this promising strategy, including variation in
tutor quality and whether there are optimal tutor-student and student-student pairings in
terms of gender and race.
The SAGA Innovations program expands on the nationally recognized innovation of high-dosage,
in-school-day tutoring developed in Match Education's charter school in Boston. The tutoring
program meets as a scheduled course, Math Lab, once a day during the normal school day, and
is provided in addition to a student's regular math class. Students taking the course receive
an elective credit upon completion. Every student works with the same full-time, professional
tutor for the entirety of the school year. The content of the tutoring sessions is aligned
with what students are learning in their regular math courses, but is also targeted to
address individual gaps in math knowledge. Also following the original model developed by
Match Education, SAGA tutors use frequent internal formative assessments of student progress
to individualize instruction.
In addition to replicating previous studies that suggest the promise of this high-dosage
tutoring model for improving the academic outcomes of at-risk youth, this study also aims to
provide insight into the ability of this program to serve youth at a much larger scale.
Despite the great need for programs that can affect the national dropout crisis and improve
youth outcomes, little is known about how to take promising education interventions to scale.
This study will begin to explore whether there is a trade-off between effectiveness and scale
by randomly assigning students to pairings and randomly assigning pairings to tutors. Tutors
will be separately ranked from highest to lowest quality by SAGA leadership, and by randomly
assigning tutors to students, the investigators will be able to explore what effect, if any,
tutor quality has on student outcomes. In addition, this study will look at whether gender
and race composition of student-tutor pairings and student-student pairings has an effect on
outcomes. This work will enable the investigators to begin to learn about variation in tutor
effectiveness and the optimal way to match kids to tutors. The research team hopes this work
will have important implications for how to scale this promising strategy both within Chicago
and beyond.
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