Slavin, Robert E., Lake, Cynthia, Hanley, Pam and Thurston, Allen (2014) Experimental evaluations of elementary science programs: A best-evidence synthesis. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 51 (7). pp. 870-901. ISSN 0022-4308
Abstract

This article presents a systematic review of research on the achievement outcomes of all types of approaches to teaching science in elementary schools. Study inclusion criteria included use of randomized or matched control groups, a study duration of at least 4 weeks, and use of achievement measures independent of the experimental treatment. A total of 23 studies met these criteria. Among studies evaluating inquiry-based teaching approaches, programs that used science kits did not show positive outcomes on science achievement measures (weighted ES=+0.02 in 7 studies), but inquiry-based programs that emphasized professional development but not kits did show positive outcomes (weighted ES=+0.36 in 10 studies). Technological approaches integrating video and computer resources with teaching and cooperative learning showed positive outcomes in a few small, matched studies (ES=+0.42 in 6 studies). The review concludes that science teaching methods focused on enhancing teachers’ classroom instruction throughout the year, such as cooperative learning and science-reading integration, as well as approaches that give teachers technology tools to enhance instruction, have significant potential to improve science learning.

Information
Library
Documents
[thumbnail of ElemSciSynth_PrePub_JRST_14.pdf]
Preview
ElemSciSynth_PrePub_JRST_14.pdf - Accepted Version

Download (412kB) | Preview
[thumbnail of ElemSciSynth_Tables_JRST_14.xls]
ElemSciSynth_Tables_JRST_14.xls - Accepted Version

Download (70kB)
Statistics

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Downloads per month over past year for
"ElemSciSynth_PrePub_JRST_14.pdf"

Downloads per month over past year for
"ElemSciSynth_Tables_JRST_14.xls"

Add to AnyAdd to TwitterAdd to FacebookAdd to LinkedinAdd to PinterestAdd to Email