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Conference Paper
Four Preschool Programs: Their Lasting Effects
Annual Meeting of the American Educational Research Association (San Francisco)
Academic achievement, Americas, Comparative education, Conferences, Early childhood care and education, Early childhood education, Elementary school students, Longitudinal studies, North America, United States of America
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Abstract/Notes: This paper discusses the long-term effects of preschool experience on sixth and seventh grade students. Subjects (n=200) were primarily black, lower-SES, Head Start children who, in 1968-69, were randomly assigned to one of four preschool programs: Bereiter-Engelmann, Darcee, Montessori, and Traditional. In 1976-77, approximately 140 of the children were given the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children - Revised (WISC-R) and the Stanford Achievement Test (SAT). Overall "F" Tests on the achievement scores of sixth graders indicated two significant differences among programs on Reading Comprehension (p=.05) and Spelling (p=.05). Program differences on Reading Total scores were significant at the .10 level. Among seventh graders there were program differences on Reading, Spelling, and Language subtests (p=.10). Four multi-variate analyses of variance comparing the SAT Total Reading and Total Math scores and WISC-R Verbal and Performance IQ scores of children in each of the four programs indicated that the Montessori program was consistently superior to the other three programs, although these program differences were not statistically significant. Comparison of sixth and seventh grades shows that preschool program participants made average gains of 6 months in Total Reading and 1 month in Total Math. At grade seven, three groups remained 1 year behind grade level. The Montessori group was about a half year behind grade level. There were no significant IQ differences between the groups. Long-term program effects on achievement were found. Overall, children from the Montessori program consistently outperformed the others. (Author/RH)
Language: English
Conference Paper
Are Multiage/Nongraded Programs Providing Students with a Quality Education? Some Answers from the School Success Study
Available from: ERIC
Fourth Annual National Create the Quality Schools Conference, April 6, 1995, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
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Abstract/Notes: This paper presents findings of the longitudinal School Success Study (SSS), which is being conducted to determine the academic and social effects of nongraded (multiage, continuous progress) programs on Tennessee elementary school students. Covering the years 1993-99, the research seeks to identify successful school practices in both nongraded and graded programs. The study includes elementary-age students (K-4) from seven Tennessee schools that are implementing nongraded programs (n=1,500), three of which also have students in traditional classes (n=750), and five comparison schools in which all students are enrolled in single-grade classes. Academic achievement is measured by the Tennessee Comprehensive Assessment Program (TCAP) and the Tennessee Holistic Writing Assessment. Social development (academic self-concept) is measured using the Self-Concept and Motivation Inventory (SCAMIN). A one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) indicates that students from nongraded classes during.
Language: English
Article
Congratulations to Recently Accredited AMS Schools
Available from: ProQuest
Publication: Montessori Life, vol. 15, no. 3
Date: Summer 2003
Pages: 7
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Language: English
ISSN: 1054-0040
Conference Paper
Effectiveness of Preschool Programs as a Function of Childrens' Socioeconomic Status
Available from: ERIC
American Educational Research Association Annual Meeting (Chicago, Illinois, April 15-19, 1974)
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Abstract/Notes: The present study involved the evaluation of the effectiveness of four types of preschool programs on the educational development of lower and middle class children. Middle class children were exposed to "unit" and "cognitive" based preschool programs; lower class children were exposed to "day care" and Montessori programs. Comparison of the children's performances in cognitive, behavioral-social, sensory-motor, and language areas to appropriate control groups indicated that the type of program presented was not significant. However, preschool educational experience, irrespective of program, was significant in facilitating educational development. Furthermore, middle class children excelled beyond the lower class children. (Author)
Language: English
Report
Prekindergarten Programs for Educationally Disadvantaged Children
Available from: ERIC
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Language: English
Published: Albany, New York, 1969
Report
Nongraded Primary Programs: Possibilities for Improving Practice for Teachers. Practitioner Brief Number 4
Available from: ERIC
Classroom environments, Nongraded schools
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Abstract/Notes: In nongraded, multi-age classrooms, children have the opportunity to learn a great deal from their more proficient classmates. Children in multi-age, nongraded programs often learn that children differ, and they learn to assist each other in productive ways. The organizational scheme has the potential to remove much of the competition of traditionally graded classrooms and, for many children, the stigma of being "behind." Researchers in the Center for Research on Education, Diversity, and Excellence (CREDE) project "Appalachian Children's Academic and Social Development at Home and in Nongraded Primary Schools: Model Programs for Children of Poverty" have studied the implementation and effects of nongraded primary programs on rural and urban children of Appalachian descent in Kentucky, where a statewide, nongraded primary program has been implemented in various forms since 1990. In this practitioner brief, the authors share responses and recommendations from administrators and practitioners in the study.
Language: English
Published: Santa Cruz, California, Apr 2002
Book Section
The Louisville Experiment: A Comparison of Four Programs
Book Title: As the Twig is Bent: Lasting Effects of Preschool Programs
Pages: 171-199
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Language: English
Published: Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1983
ISBN: 0-89859-271-2 978-0-89859-271-9
Book Section
History and Background of Preschool Intervention Programs and the Consortium for Longitudinal Studies
Book Title: As the Twig is Bent: Lasting Effects of Preschool Programs
Pages: 1-31
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Language: English
Published: Hillsdale, New Jersey: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1983
ISBN: 0-89859-271-2 978-0-89859-271-9
A Comparison of Academic Achievement for Seventh Grade and Eighth Grade Students from Montessori and Non-Montessori School Programs
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Language: English
Published: Stephenville, Texas, 2011
Book Section
Curricular Considerations in Programs for the Retarded: Application of the Montessori Model
Book Title: Montessori and the Special Child
Pages: 73-81
Brain-damaged children, Children with disabilities, Developmentally disabled children, Montessori method of education, Special education
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Language: English
Published: New York: Putnam's sons, 1969