Explicit instruction is a systematic instructional approach that facilitates frequent and meaningful instructional interactions between teachers and students around critical academic content. This study examined the relationship between student mathematics outcomes and the rate and quality of explicit instructional interactions that occur during core mathematics instruction in kindergarten classrooms using a multifaceted observation system. A total of 379 observations were conducted in 129 classrooms, involving approximately 2,200 students across a 2-year span. Results suggest that the rate and quality of instructional interactions is related to student mathematics achievement. Implications for instruction and observation research are discussed.
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Journals Division
The University of Chicago Press
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Examining the Association between Explicit Mathematics Instruction and Student Mathematics Achievement
Christian T. Doabler,
University of Oregon
Scott K. Baker,
Southern Methodist University
Derek B. Kosty and Keith Smolkowski,
Oregon Research Institute
Ben Clarke,
University of Oregon
Saralyn J. Miller, and
Southern Methodist University
Hank Fien
University of Oregon
ARTICLE CITATION
Christian T. Doabler, Scott K. Baker, Derek B. Kosty, Keith Smolkowski, Ben Clarke, Saralyn J. Miller, and Hank Fien, "Examining the Association between Explicit Mathematics Instruction and Student Mathematics Achievement," The Elementary School Journal 115, no. 3 (March 2015): 303-333.
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