The effects of small class sizes on students' academic achievement, socioemotional development and well-being in special education: A systematic review

IF 4 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Anja Bondebjerg, Nina Thorup Dalgaard, Trine Filges, Bjørn Christian Arleth Viinholt
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background

Class size reductions in general education are some of the most researched educational interventions in social science, yet researchers have not reached any final conclusions regarding their effects. While research on the relationship between general education class size and student achievement is plentiful, research on class size in special education is scarce, even though class size issues must be considered particularly important to students with special educational needs. These students compose a highly diverse group in terms of diagnoses, functional levels, and support needs, but they share a common need for special educational accommodations, which often entails additional instructional support in smaller units than what is normally provided in general education. At this point, there is however a lack of clarity as to the effects of special education class sizes on student academic achievement and socioemotional development. Inevitably, such lack of clarity is an obstacle for special educators and policymakers trying to make informed decisions. This highlights the policy relevance of the current systematic review, in which we sought to examine the effects of small class sizes in special education on the academic achievement, socioemotional development, and well-being of children with special educational needs.

Objectives

The objective of this systematic review was to uncover and synthesise data from studies to assess the impact of small class sizes on the academic achievement, socioemotional development, and well-being of students with special educational needs. We also aimed to investigate the extent to which the effects differed among subgroups of students. Finally, we planned to perform a qualitative exploration of the experiences of children, teachers, and parents with class size issues in special education.

Search Methods

Relevant studies were identified through electronic searches in bibliographic databases, searches in grey literature resources, searches using Internet search engines, hand-searches of specific targeted journals, and citation-tracking. The following bibliographic databases were searched in April 2021: ERIC (EBSCO-host), Academic Search Premier (EBSCO-host), EconLit (EBSCO-host), APA PsycINFO (EBSCO-host), SocINDEX (EBSCO-host), International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (ProQuest), Sociological Abstracts (ProQuest), and Web of Science (Clarivate, Science Citation Index Expanded & Social Sciences Citation Index). EBSCO OPEN Dissertations was also searched in April 2021, while the remaining searches for grey literature, hand-searches in key journals, and citation-tracking took place between January and May 2022.

Selection Criteria

The intervention in this review was a small special education class size. Eligible quantitative study designs were studies that used a well-defined control or comparison group, that is, studies where there was a comparison between students in smaller classes and students in larger classes. Children with special educational needs in grades K-12 (or the equivalent in European countries) in special education were eligible. In addition to exploring the effects of small class sizes in special education from a quantitative perspective, we aimed to gain insight into the lived experiences of children, teachers, and parents with class size issues in special education contexts, as they are presented in the qualitative research literature. The review therefore also included all types of empirical qualitative studies that collected primary data and provided descriptions of main methodological issues such as selection of informants, data collection procedures, and type of data analysis. Eligible qualitative study designs included but were not limited to studies using ethnographic observation or field work formats, or qualitative interview techniques applied to individual or focus group conversations.

Data Collection and Analysis

The literature search yielded a total of 26,141 records which were screened for eligibility based on title and abstract. From these, 262 potentially relevant records were retrieved and screened in full text, resulting in seven studies being included: three quantitative and five qualitative studies (one study contained both eligible quantitative and qualitative data). Two of the quantitative studies could not be used in the data synthesis as they were judged to have a critical risk of bias and, in accordance with the protocol, were excluded from the meta-analysis on the basis that they would be more likely to mislead than inform. The third quantitative study did not provide enough information enabling us to calculate an effect size and standard error. Meta-analysis was therefore not possible. Following quality appraisal of the qualitative studies, three qualitative studies were judged to be of sufficient methodological quality. It was not possible to perform a qualitative thematic synthesis since in two of these studies, findings particular to special education class size were scarce. Therefore, only descriptive data extraction could be performed.

Main Results

Despite the comprehensive searches, the present review only included seven studies published between 1926 and 2020. Two studies were purely quantitative (Forness, 1985; Metzner, 1926) and from the U.S. Four studies used qualitative methodology (Gottlieb, 1997; Huang, 2020; Keith, 1993; Prunty, 2012) and were from the US (2), China (1), and Ireland (1). One study, MAGI Educational Services (1995), contained both eligible quantitative and qualitative data and was from the U.S.

Authors' Conclusions

The major finding of the present review was that there were virtually no contemporary quantitative studies exploring the effects of small class sizes in special education, thus making it impossible to perform a meta-analysis. More research is therefore thoroughly needed. Findings from the summary of included qualitative studies reflected that to the special education students and staff members participating in these studies, smaller class sizes were the preferred option because they allowed for more individualised instruction time and increased teacher attention to students' diverse needs. It should be noted that these studies were few in number and took place in very diverse contexts and across a large time span. There is a need for more qualitative research into the views and experiences of teachers, parents, and school administrators with special education class sizes in different local contexts and across various provision models. But most importantly, future research should strive to represent the voices of children and young people with special needs since they are the experts when it comes to matters concerning their own lives.

Abstract Image

小班教学对特殊教育学生学业成绩、社会情感发展和幸福感的影响:一项系统回顾
普通教育班级规模的缩减是社会科学中研究最多的教育干预措施之一,但研究人员尚未就其效果得出任何最终结论。普通教育班级规模与学生成绩之间关系的研究很多,而特殊教育班级规模的研究却很少,尽管班级规模问题对于有特殊教育需要的学生来说是特别重要的。这些学生在诊断、功能水平和支持需求方面构成了一个高度多样化的群体,但他们都有一个共同的特殊教育住宿需求,这通常需要比普通教育通常提供的更小的单元的额外教学支持。然而,在这一点上,特殊教育班级规模对学生学业成绩和社会情感发展的影响尚不清楚。不可避免地,这种缺乏明确性的情况会阻碍特殊教育工作者和决策者做出明智的决定。这突出了当前系统回顾的政策相关性,我们试图检查特殊教育中小班制对有特殊教育需求的儿童的学业成就、社会情感发展和福祉的影响。本系统综述的目的是揭示和综合来自研究的数据,以评估小班教学对有特殊教育需求的学生的学业成绩、社会情感发展和福祉的影响。我们还旨在调查学生亚组之间的影响差异程度。最后,我们计划对特殊教育中班级规模问题的儿童、教师和家长的经验进行定性探讨。检索方法通过书目数据库的电子检索、灰色文献资源的检索、互联网搜索引擎的检索、特定目标期刊的手工检索和引文跟踪等方法确定相关研究。我们于2021年4月检索了以下书目数据库:ERIC (EBSCO-host)、Academic Search Premier (EBSCO-host)、EconLit (EBSCO-host)、APA PsycINFO (EBSCO-host)、SocINDEX (EBSCO-host)、International Bibliography of The Social Sciences (ProQuest)、Sociological Abstracts (ProQuest)和Web of Science (Clarivate, Science Citation Index Expanded &社会科学引文索引)。EBSCO OPEN dissertation也在2021年4月进行了搜索,而其余的灰色文献搜索、关键期刊的手工搜索和引文跟踪则在2022年1月至5月之间进行。本综述的干预措施为小班特殊教育。合格的定量研究设计是使用定义明确的对照组或对照组的研究,即在小班学生和大班学生之间进行比较的研究。在特殊教育中,K-12年级(或欧洲国家同等水平)有特殊教育需要的儿童符合资格。除了从定量的角度探讨小班制对特殊教育的影响外,我们的目标是深入了解特殊教育背景下班级规模问题的儿童、教师和家长的生活经历,正如他们在定性研究文献中所呈现的那样。因此,本综述还包括收集原始数据的所有类型的经验定性研究,并提供了对主要方法问题的描述,如举报人的选择、数据收集程序和数据分析类型。合格的定性研究设计包括但不限于使用人种学观察或实地工作形式的研究,或应用于个人或焦点小组对话的定性访谈技术。文献检索共获得26141条记录,根据标题和摘要进行筛选。从中检索并筛选了262个可能相关的记录全文,结果纳入了7项研究:3项定量研究和5项定性研究(一项研究同时包含了合格的定量和定性数据)。 其中两项定量研究不能用于数据综合,因为它们被判断为具有严重的偏倚风险,并且根据方案,它们更有可能误导而不是提供信息,因此被排除在元分析之外。第三个定量研究没有提供足够的信息使我们能够计算效应大小和标准误差。因此不可能进行meta分析。在对定性研究进行质量评价后,三个定性研究被认为具有足够的方法学质量。由于在其中两项研究中很少有特别针对特殊教育班级规模的研究结果,因此不可能进行定性的专题综合。因此,只能进行描述性数据提取。尽管进行了全面的检索,但本综述仅包括1926年至2020年间发表的7项研究。两项研究纯粹是定量的(Forness, 1985;Metzner, 1926)和来自美国的四项研究使用了定性方法(Gottlieb, 1997;黄,2020;基思,1993;Prunty, 2012),分别来自美国(2)、中国(1)和爱尔兰(1)。一项名为MAGI教育服务(1995)的研究包含了来自美国的合格定量和定性数据。作者结论:本综述的主要发现是,几乎没有当代定量研究探索小班制在特殊教育中的影响。因此不可能进行元分析。因此,需要进行更多的研究。对参与这些研究的特殊教育学生和教职员来说,小班教学是更可取的选择,因为小班教学可以提供更多的个性化教学时间,并增加教师对学生多样化需求的关注。应当指出的是,这些研究数量很少,而且是在非常不同的背景下进行的,时间跨度也很大。有必要对教师、家长和学校管理人员在不同地方背景和不同教学模式下的特殊教育班级规模的观点和经验进行更多的定性研究。但最重要的是,未来的研究应该努力代表有特殊需要的儿童和年轻人的声音,因为他们是涉及自己生活问题的专家。
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来源期刊
Campbell Systematic Reviews
Campbell Systematic Reviews Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
21.90%
发文量
80
审稿时长
6 weeks
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