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Can Reorganizing K-8 Education Improve Academic Performance? The Impact of Grade Span on Student Achievement AMY ELLEN SCHWARTZ NEW YORK UNIVERSITY – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AMY ELLEN SCHWARTZ


1
Can Reorganizing K-8 Education Improve Academic
Performance? The Impact of Grade Span on Student
Achievement
  • AMY ELLEN SCHWARTZ
  • NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
  •  
  • LEANNA STIEFEL
  • NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
  •  
  • ROSS RUBENSTEIN
  • SYRACUSE UNIVERSITY
  •  
  • JEFFREY ZABEL
  • TUFTS UNIVERSITY

US Department of Education Institute for
Education Sciences grant R305E040096 provided
support for work leading to this paper.
2
Overview
  • Motivation and lit review
  • Why might grade span matter?
  • Data and description of NYC grade spans
  • Analysis and Results
  • Conclusions

3
Motivation for Study
  • Why might grade span matter?
  • Indirect effects through relationships with
  • Timing and number of school transitions
  • Student-school matching
  • School culture

4
Conceptual Model Grade Span and Student
Performance
5
Previous Literature
  • Much attention to, and controversy over, middle
    schools (6-8)
  • Four previous good quality studies
  • Middle schools lower on-time high school
    graduation
  • K-8s in Philadelphia outperform middle schools
  • Higher self-esteem and perceived safety in K-8
    vs. middle schools
  • 6th graders in elementary school have fewer
    behavioral problems relative to those in middle
    school

6
Considerable experimentation but little evidence
  • Five-fold increase in percentage of middle
    schools (6-8) between 1971 and 2002
  • Recent trend toward K-8 schools
  • Considerable experimentation with grade span as
    policy reform, but little rigorous evidence on
    effects for different types of students

7
Contributions of Current Study
  • Exploits grade span variation in nations largest
    district (New York City)
  • Uses longitudinal student data to track cohorts
    over five years
  • Examines transitions across grades and across
    schools, rather a single point in time
  • Measure gains in academic performance between
    third grade and the eighth grade
  • Eighth grade critical juncture for high school
    readiness

8
Data
  • Elementary and middle grades in NYC
  • 915 schools
  • Approximately 28 grade span configurations
  • Include students making Standard Academic
    Progress (SAP) from 4th to 8th grade
  • Track students academic paths
  • Sequence of grade span configurations a student
    might attend between 4th and 8th grades (e.g. K-5
    to 6-8)

9
Trends in Grade Span
  • More K-5 and 6-8
  • Fewer K-6 and 7-8
  • More K-8

10
Many Paths From 4th to 8th Grade
11
Analyses
  • Basic models
  • Regress eighth grade scores (math and reading)
    on academic paths, controlling for third grade
    scores and a variety of student characteristics
  • Sensitivity analyses
  • Attrition
  • Non-SAP students
  • Interactions with race and performance

12
Do Grade Spans Look Different?
  • Yes!
  • For example K-8 compared to 6-8-- start with
    lower performance in 3rd grade-- end with higher
    performance in 8th grade-- have lower percentage
    of white and Asian-- have higher percentage of
    black-- have poorer studentsImportant to
    control for these differences

13
Academic Paths 8th graders in 2001-2002, SAP
Cohort
Math Math Reading Reading Reading Reading
K-8 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.18
K-6 to 7-8
K-4 to 5-8
K-5 to 6-9
Articulate on Time and Joined in Midstream Articulate on Time and Joined in Midstream Articulate on Time and Joined in Midstream Articulate on Time and Joined in Midstream Articulate on Time and Joined in Midstream Articulate on Time and Joined in Midstream
K-6 to 6-8
K-6 to 7-9
K-5 to 5-8
K-6 to 5-8 0.10 0.10 0.12
K-5 to K-8 0.16 0.16 0.19
Articulate Early to be on Time at Next Level Articulate Early to be on Time at Next Level Articulate Early to be on Time at Next Level Articulate Early to be on Time at Next Level Articulate Early to be on Time at Next Level Articulate Early to be on Time at Next Level
K-6 to 6-8 early
K-8 to 6-8
K-5 to 5-8 early
14
Threats to Validity and Unanswered Questions
  • Attrition bias from exclusion of exiting and
    retained students
  • Approach Correction for non-random attrition in
    panel data
  • Are effects different for non-SAP students who
    enter later?
  • Approach Model of short-term gains for retained
    and exiting students
  • Are effects different by sub-groups?
  • Approach Interactions between grade span and
    student characteristics (race, low performance)

15
What happens when correct for attrition out of
SAP?
  • Still find comparatively better performance in
    math and reading for students in
  • K-8 whole time
  • Switch into K-8
  • A few others (K-6/5-8)

16
Students who enter late or are retained
  • Do they do as well in K-8s as SAP students who
    have been there since 3rd grade?
  • Yes and sometimes better
  • from 7th to 8th grade for students in SAP and
    latecomers
  • SAP always do better in K-8
  • New entrants and retainees do better even or the
    same

17
Subgroup Analysis 8th Graders in 2001-02
  • Do lower achieving students do better in some
    paths? (Compared to K-5/6-8)
  • Yes, but only in math. They do better in K-8
  • In reading, they do worse in K-8 and most other
    paths.
  • Do black, Hispanic or Asian Students do better in
    some paths?
  • No particular paths stand out

18
Conclusions
  • Grade span appears to matter
  • Significantly larger long-term gains for students
    in K-8
  • Effects hold in various specifications and for
    students not making standard academic progress
  • Little evidence of differential effects for
    minority and low-performing students

19
Cautions and unanswered questions
  • What features of K-8 are particularly effective?
  • Would scaling up to all K-8 have same effects?
  • Experimental designs could improve validity of
    results
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