学前教育课程的效果:心智工具的个案研究。

IF 9.4 1区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, DEVELOPMENTAL
Kimberly T Nesbitt, Dale C Farran
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引用次数: 28

摘要

研究表明,儿童参与高质量的幼儿保育和教育往往对他们的社会情感、自我调节和成就结果产生直接的积极影响。大多数关于幼儿保育和教育影响的研究都狭隘地集中在美国,但倡导在幼儿保育和教育方面进行经济和社会投资,以支持未来儿童的成长和福祉,现在在国际范围内存在。从长远来看,学前教育项目的效果并没有那么明显。为了提高孩子们的长期成绩,一个建议的策略是有意的、脚本化的课程。我们在这本专著中的目标是提供一个完全整合和全面的大规模,纵向,基于现场的随机对照试验的心智工具(工具的内部一致性),发生在美国的幼儿园前课程。我们的意图是双重的。首先,我们考察了工具课程本身的影响,解决了课程对提高学前教育质量和儿童学业、执行功能、自我调节和社会结果的潜在影响。其次,我们考虑了一个更广泛的问题,即在早期教育中使用有意的、脚本化的课程,是否能更普遍地提高儿童的短期和长期成果。从维果茨基框架发展而来,工具侧重于为儿童提供学习的认知工具,然后他们可以将其应用于获取和维持学术知识以及行为能力的任务。因此,Tools是一个综合的、全面的课程,而不是一个补充课程。工具方法是从儿童发展的社会文化角度出发的,强调儿童与知识渊博的其他人合作获得技能和文化工具。详细描述了4年纵向集群随机对照试验的方法。我们提供了关于招募、治疗条件随机化、儿童评估工具和程序以及观察性评估的全面信息,包括实施的保真度和教师和儿童的课堂行为。我们提供的结果比较了32个被分配到工具条件下的教室和28个被分配到一切照旧的控制条件下的儿童的学业、执行功能、自我调节和社会收益,从幼儿园到一年级结束。课程的开发者特别希望看到这些措施带来的好处。工具对任何结果都没有积极的影响。缺乏预期的课程效果需要仔细考虑,并提出了关于课程经验如何在评估技能中表现出来的更普遍的问题。作为理解研究结果的第一步,我们将重点放在实施工具的教师上,并检查了课程按预期交付的程度,以及实施的保真度与幼儿园前儿童成果之间的关系。结果表明,观察到的实施保真度存在很大差异,但实施保真度与任何儿童结局之间没有一致的关联。在与积极的学生成果相关的更普遍的实践和互动方面,课程的开发者假设实施工具将加强课堂实践和师生互动。他们预计会受到影响的方面包括非教学行为的数量、教师主导和儿童主导的活动、教师和儿童的谈话、社会学习互动、课堂情绪气氛、教师教学质量和儿童的参与程度。教师在实验组和对照组课堂上的差异与他们在不同条件下在大多数检查方面的差异一样大。我们发现在大多数实践和交互的实验条件之间没有差异。课程的范围和内容各不相同,但它们都旨在改变课堂过程,从而促进目标技能的发展。为了使这种中介假设成立,有针对性的课堂过程必须与儿童的结果相关联。我们研究了课堂教学过程与幼儿学前班和幼儿园收益之间的联系,并发现了它们在幼儿课堂中的重要性。这些发现证明了确定策略以加强这些课堂实践和互动的价值。我们将研究结果置于幼儿教育扩展政策和实践的大背景下,并提供了一系列经验教训。 我们报告的研究是对单一课程的单一评估,但我们认为所吸取的教训是普遍的,并有助于理解为什么课程评估产生了如此复杂的结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effects of Prekindergarten Curricula: Tools of the Mind as a Case Study.

Research demonstrates that children's participation in quality early childhood care and education often has immediate positive effects on their social-emotional, self-regulation, and achievement outcomes. Most of the research on the impacts of early child care and education has focused narrowly on the United States, but advocacy for economic and social investment in early childhood care and education to support future children's growth and well-being now exists on an international scale. The longer-term outcomes from prekindergarten programs have not been as strong. To improve children's long-term outcomes, one suggested strategy is an intentional, scripted curriculum. Our goal in this monograph is to provide a fully integrated and comprehensive account of a large-scale, longitudinal, field-based randomized control trial of the Tools of the Mind (Internal consistency of the Tools) prekindergarten curriculum that occurred in the United States. Our intent is twofold. First, we examine the impact of the Tools curriculum itself, addressing both the potential impacts of the curriculum to improve prekindergarten quality and children's academic, executive function, self-regulation, and social outcomes. Second, we consider the broader question of whether the use of intentional, scripted curricula during early education can, more generally, enhance both short- and long-term outcomes in children. Developed from a Vygotskian framework, Tools focuses on equipping children with cognitive tools for learning that they can then apply to the task of acquiring and sustaining academic knowledge as well as behavioral competencies. Thus, Tools is an integrated, comprehensive curriculum, not a supplementary one. The Tools approach follows from a socio-cultural perspective on child development that emphasizes children's acquisition of skills and cultural tools in collaboration with knowledgeable others. The methodology of the 4-year longitudinal cluster randomized control trial is described in detail. We provide comprehensive information about recruitment, randomization of treatment condition, child assessment instrumentation and procedures, as well as observational assessments, including fidelity of implementation and teacher and child classroom behaviors. We provide results comparing 32 classrooms assigned to the Tools condition and 28 assigned to the business-as-usual control condition for children's academic, executive function, self-regulation, and social gains from prekindergarten to the end of first grade. Developers of the curriculum specifically expected to see benefits on these measures. There were no positive effects for Tools on any of the outcomes. The lack of expected curriculum effects required careful consideration and raised more general questions about how curriculum experiences manifest themselves in assessed skills. As a first step to understanding the findings, we focused on teachers who were implementing Tools and examined the degree to which the curriculum was delivered as intended and the relations between fidelity of implementation and children's outcomes in prekindergarten. Results indicated a wide variation in observed fidelity of implementation but no consistent associations between fidelity of implementation and any child outcomes. In terms of more general practices and interactions associated with positive student outcomes, developers of the curriculum hypothesized that implementing Tools would enhance classroom practices and teacher-child interactions. Among the aspects they expected to be affected were the amount of non-instructional behaviors, teacher-led and child-directed activities, teacher and child talk, social learning interactions, classroom emotional climate, quality of teacher instruction, and children's level of involvement. Teachers varied as much within treatment and control classrooms as they did between conditions on most of the aspects examined. We found no differences between experimental conditions on most practices and interactions. Curricula vary in scope and content, but they are universally intended to change classroom processes in ways that in turn will facilitate the development of targeted skills. For this mediational hypothesis to hold, the targeted classroom processes must be associated with child outcomes. We examined the associations between the classroom processes and children's prekindergarten and kindergarten gains and found support for their importance in early childhood classrooms. These findings demonstrate the value of identifying strategies to enhance these classroom practices and interactions. We situate the findings of our study within the larger context of early childhood education expansion policies and practices, and we offer a set of lessons learned. The study we report is a single evaluation of a single curriculum, yet we hold that the lessons learned are general and shed light on understanding why evaluations of curriculum have yielded such mixed results.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
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期刊介绍: Since 1935, Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development has been a platform for presenting in-depth research studies and significant findings in child development and related disciplines. Each issue features a single study or a collection of papers on a unified theme, often complemented by commentary and discussion. In alignment with all Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) publications, the Monographs facilitate the exchange of data, techniques, research methods, and conclusions among development specialists across diverse disciplines. Subscribing to the Monographs series also includes a full subscription (6 issues) to Child Development, the flagship journal of the SRCD, and Child Development Perspectives, the newest journal from the SRCD.
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