Transformative tutoring initiative shows marked improvement in math scores for prep students
Preliminary research results show “high-dosage” tutoring in mathematics resulted in better test scores for Oklahoma high school students who participated in a study led by the Transformative Tutoring Initiative program of the Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education at the University of Oklahoma.
“Oklahoma’s eighth graders have performed well below the national average for mathematics on the National Assessment of Educational Progress test for two decades,” said Stacy Reeder, dean of the Jeannine Rainbolt College of Education. “Tragically, on the most recent NAEP test, Oklahoma students demonstrated the greatest decline in mathematics learning compared to all other states in the nation. The timing of this decline indicates a profound toll on student mathematics learning during the pandemic. We must treat the task of helping students with the urgency this moment demands. High-dosage tutoring has the potential to transform learning outcomes for students in our state.”
Made possible by a $3 million gift from The Randall and Lenise Stephenson Family Foundation, the Transformative Tutoring Initiative staff trained more than 100 OU students to serve as tutors for 194 students at the school sites, which cover urban, rural and suburban districts. The two-year study was structured using a randomized control to measure the effect of what the researchers describe as high-dosage tutoring in mathematics, consisting of one trained tutor working with two students for a 50-minute class period three times a week.
The first year of the study in 2021-22 took place at two high schools in the Oklahoma City and Norman metro regions and expanded to include five high schools in the same regions during the second year. Ninth-grade students enrolled at the participating schools who previously exhibited low achievement at the end of eighth grade were randomized to treatment and control conditions.