Increasing urban students’ achievement scores through successful behavior management and time-on-task

Increasing urban students’ achievement scores through successful behavior management and time-on-task
By Lisa Nehring, Johns Hopkins University
University of Missouri’s Keith C. Herman and colleagues evaluated the efficacy of the CHAMPS classroom management program in a randomized control trial of urban middle schools in the Midwest United States. CHAMPS, a teacher training program, encompasses six dimensions that facilitate teachers’ delineation of expectations in any setting: Conversation, Help, Activity, Movement, Participation, and Signal [CHAMPS]. Embedded in the CHAMPS program is the assumption that all behavior is learned and can be explicitly altered. Using this mode of thinking, teachers who develop an effective classroom management plan that is at once preventative, upbeat, and behaviorally instructive will be able to better structure their classrooms and reduce off-task behaviors.
 
Middle school teachers and students were recruited from two urban school districts to participate in a group randomized control trial of the CHAMPS program. Participants were assigned to the CHAMPS intervention condition (teachers n=50, students n=607) or to a wait-list control condition (teachers n=51, students n=636). Pre- and post-intervention assessments, including academic assessment, were completed at the beginning and end of the respective cohort’s school year. The CHAMPS intervention comprised two full-day group trainings and one follow-up session as well as an on-site coach who supported teacher implementation. The control condition entailed business-as-usual teaching and professional development opportunities.
 
Statistical analysis revealed significant effects on students’ MAP English scores (ES=+0.14) as well as SAT-10 problem solving scores (ES=+0.17). Additionally, the CHAMPS intervention had a significant effect on student time-on-task (ES=+0.16) as reported by students’ teachers. The authors found that students’ increased English scores were partially mediated by improvements in observed time-on-task. These findings highlight the importance of improving teacher classroom management training for increasing student achievement at scale.

Views: 17

Reply to This

JOIN SL 2.0

SUBSCRIBE TO

SCHOOL LEADERSHIP 2.0

School Leadership 2.0 is the premier virtual learning community for school leaders from around the globe.  Our community is a subscription based paid service ($19.95/year or only $1.99 per month for a trial membership)  which will provide school leaders with outstanding resources. Learn more about membership to this service by clicking one our links below.

 

Click HERE to subscribe as an individual.

 

Click HERE to learn about group membership (i.e. association, leadership teams)

__________________

CREATE AN EMPLOYER PROFILE AND GET JOB ALERTS AT 

SCHOOLLEADERSHIPJOBS.COM

FOLLOW SL 2.0

© 2024   Created by William Brennan and Michael Keany   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service