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By CHARLES ANZALONE Contributing Editor
A program designed by UB researchers to increase mathematics
achievement in pre-kindergarten students has proven successful in a
large-scale study in Buffalo and Boston.
 |  Douglas Clements
and Julie Sarama developed the Building Blocks curriculum, which
emphasizes research-based instruction that helps teachers understand the
way young children think about math. PHOTO: DOUGLAS LEVERE
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The program, based on an educational model called TRIAD and including
the Building Blocks math curriculum, raised test scores by about 50
percent more than the “business-as-usual” approach.
The study addresses two urgent needs identified by President
Bush’s National Math Advisory Panel to improve the way American
schools teach math. The first is to increase performance in early
childhood mathematics, an area the national experts cited as one of the
most pressing priorities in the country’s mathematics education.
The second is to develop a curriculum and an approach to implement it
that can be “scaled-up,” or shown effective for a large
sample of students. “A major recommendation of President
Bush's National Math Advisory Panel (NMP) was to create and evaluate
ways of scaling-up effective early childhood mathematics programs. This
we have done,” says Douglas H. Clements, a member of the NMP and a
professor of learning and instruction in the Graduate School of
Education. Clements designed the program with Julie A. Sarama, associate
professor of learning and instruction. A total of 662 students in
Buffalo and 267 students in Boston were taught using the Building Blocks
curriculum. Developed by Clements and Sarama, it stresses research-based
instruction that helps teachers understand the way young children think
about math and how that thought process develops. A second group of
students began taking this curriculum a year later in Nashville, Tenn.;
the results of this study are still pending. The work was done
under a $7.2 million grant from the Institute of Education Sciences of
the U.S. Department of Education. It also was part of the Interagency
Educational Research Initiative. This math curriculum was taught
under the TRIAD model, which stands for “technology-enhanced,
research-based instruction, assessment and professional
development.” The TRIAD model features 10 educational
principles—including coaching and mentoring for teachers, the use
of technology and enhanced institutional development—that aim to
help students achieve more and remember what they learn. A group
of 286 pre-kindergarten students in Buffalo and 94 students in Boston
served as a control group. Teachers for the control students used
a math curriculum other than Building Blocks that was not taught
under the TRIAD model. All students were tested in fall 2006 and
retested in spring 2007 on a variety of math and problem-solving
outcomes. Those in the control group increased their scores by about 100
points, an increase that Clements called a “large gain—more
than double what is often seen around the country.” But the
increases were even higher for those pre-K students exposed to Building
Blocks and TRIAD. The increases in their scores were significantly
higher than the students in the control groups. “They
gained even more,” says Clements. “They moved up 150 points.
Those are very large gains.” The study produced some clear
conclusions, according to the UB researchers. The 100-point
increase for students in the control group showed students can learn
substantial mathematics in the early years if a school district commits
to the importance of mathematics education. But the 150-point
jump for students studying under Building Blocks and TRIAD showed these
specific programs developed by UB researchers can make an even bigger
difference. “The big picture is if a district decides to implement
a program and is willing to take the time to do it right, you are going
to see dramatic results,” says Sarama. “It would be
difficult for any intervention to make a gain above and beyond what the
control students showed, and therefore for the TRIAD model to make any
difference, but it did,” says Clements. “Therefore, the
TRIAD model and Building Blocks curriculum were value-added ingredients
in a fairly intense test of whether they made a significant difference
for children.” The TRIAD model is especially valuable
because it can be used in areas in addition to mathematics, according to
the UB team. “It’s a model that can be applied to reading,
fourth-grade science, social studies,” Clements says. “The
findings from the TRIAD model can be generalized to other grades and
other subjects.” The UB researchers plan to continue
working with these children and will assess their growth in coming
years. Clements says he believes the results shown in this study
will prove sustainable—lasting over several years—provided
schools are willing to continue the TRIAD approach. “If we
work with the kindergarten and the first-grade teachers, the gains these
students made in pre-K will be built upon and increased,” Clements
says.
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