A Comparison of the Achievement Level of Third Grade Students on the CRCT when Comparing Standard-based Instruction with Traditional Instruction

A Comparison of the Achievement Level of Third Grade Students on the CRCT when Comparing Standard-based Instruction with Traditional Instruction
Author: Latrina Gates
Publisher:
Total Pages: 88
Release: 2010
Genre: Criterion-referenced tests
ISBN:

By the year 2014, all students, including all subgroups, are expected to meet the standards that have been set each state under No Child Left Behind. In an effort to meet this federal goal, states and districts all across America have revised their curriculum and are seeking prove, research-based methods to engage students and encourage high achievement for all students. The purpose of this study was to compare standards-based instruction to traditional instruction and seek to determine if there was a statistical difference in the two instructional deliveries. The Georgia third grade math Criterion Referenced Competency Test scores were analyzed from the 2008-2009 Main Administration session. This was a quantitative study and the design was causal-comparative. This study sought to examine if there was a statistical difference in the mean score on the CRCT of third grade student receiving Standards-based Instruction (Subgroup A) in math and in the mean score of third grade students receiving Traditional Instruction (Subgroup B). An analysis of the CRCT math scores was performed using a t-test with a degrees of freedom of 36 and .05 level of significance. The results of the study did not show a statistically significant difference I the mean score on the CRCT of third grade students receiving Standards-based Instruction (Subgroup A) in math and the mean score on the CRCT of third grade students receiving Traditional Instruction (Subgroup B) in math.

A Comparison of Two Types of Reading Instruction for Improving Third-Grade CRCT Reading Scores

A Comparison of Two Types of Reading Instruction for Improving Third-Grade CRCT Reading Scores
Author: Amber Michelle Martin
Publisher:
Total Pages: 70
Release: 2009
Genre: Criterion-referenced tests
ISBN:

This casual comparative research design that utilized pre-existing data compared reading scores of third-grade students at the School Under Study (SUS) in Muscogee County, Georgia, who received reading instruction either through ability grouping or heterogeneous grouping, in order to discover if there was a statistically significant difference between the mean scores of the two instructional strategies. The study evaluated the results of each instructional strategy by analyzing the third-grade reading Criterion Referenced Competency Test (CRCT) of the 2007-2008 and 2008-2009 school years. A statistically significant difference between the third-grade students received reading instruction through ability grouping and heterogeneous grouping was not found.

Reading First and Its Effects on Third Grade CRCT Reading Scores

Reading First and Its Effects on Third Grade CRCT Reading Scores
Author: Dorothy Young Crimes
Publisher:
Total Pages: 80
Release: 2009
Genre: Criterion-referenced tests
ISBN:

This quantitative research study evaluated CRCT reading achievement of students in third grade who received reading instruction with the guidance of the Reading First Program and students who received reading instruction without the guidance of the Reading First Program. The study included CRCT reading scores for third grade students in the spring of 2004, at the time the Quality Core Curriculum (QCC) Standards were used. By the spring of 2008, Georgia was following the Georgia Performance Standards (GPS). The third grade students tested in spring 2004 did not receive reading instruction with the guidance of the First program. The students who were tested in spring 2008 received reading instruction with the guidance of the Reading First Program from kindergarten through third grade. The data was collected from a small, rural public school in southwest Georgia. To analyze the data, a chi square statistic was calculated across the categories “did not meet” standards, “met” standards and “exceeded” standards. The researcher examined 79 third grade CRCT reading subtest scores. The researcher concluded that there is no statistical difference in CRCT reading scores for the two groups researched.