Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.

The kindergarten program, Tools of the Mind (Tools), has been shown to improve executive functions (as assessed by laboratory measures) and academic performance. The objective here was to see if Tools can improve executive functions in the real world (in the classroom), academic outcomes not previou...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Adele Diamond, Chris Lee, Peter Senften, Andrea Lam, David Abbott
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222447
id doaj-8499a69b05594c6f91efc47724b40116
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8499a69b05594c6f91efc47724b401162021-03-03T21:44:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01149e022244710.1371/journal.pone.0222447Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.Adele DiamondChris LeePeter SenftenAndrea LamDavid AbbottThe kindergarten program, Tools of the Mind (Tools), has been shown to improve executive functions (as assessed by laboratory measures) and academic performance. The objective here was to see if Tools can improve executive functions in the real world (in the classroom), academic outcomes not previously investigated, reduce bullying and peer ostracism, and increase teachers' and students' joy in being in the classroom. This first randomized controlled trial of Tools in Canada included 351 kindergarten children (mean age 5.2 years at entry; 51% female) in 18 public schools. Stratified randomization resulted in teachers and students in both groups being closely matched. Teachers in both groups received the same number of training hours and same funds for new materials. Outcome measures were pre and post standardized academic skill assessments and teacher online survey responses. This study replicated that Tools improves reading and shows for the first time that it improves writing (far exceeding levels the school districts had seen before), self-control and attention-regulation in the real world (e.g., time on task without supervision), reduces teacher burnout and children being ostracized or excluded, and increases the joy students and teachers experience in school. By Spring, Tools teachers were still enthusiastic about teaching; control teachers were exhausted. These results were not only better than the control group but also better than Tools teachers experienced the year before Tools. Thus, children in a kindergarten curriculum that emphasized play, improving self-regulation, working together and helping one another, and hands-on learning performed better academically, showed less bullying and peer ostracism and more kindness and helping behavior than students in more traditional classes, and teacher enthusiasm for teaching soared. Tools reduced initial disparities separating children, schools, and teachers.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222447
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adele Diamond
Chris Lee
Peter Senften
Andrea Lam
David Abbott
spellingShingle Adele Diamond
Chris Lee
Peter Senften
Andrea Lam
David Abbott
Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Adele Diamond
Chris Lee
Peter Senften
Andrea Lam
David Abbott
author_sort Adele Diamond
title Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
title_short Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
title_full Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
title_fullStr Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
title_full_unstemmed Randomized control trial of Tools of the Mind: Marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
title_sort randomized control trial of tools of the mind: marked benefits to kindergarten children and their teachers.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The kindergarten program, Tools of the Mind (Tools), has been shown to improve executive functions (as assessed by laboratory measures) and academic performance. The objective here was to see if Tools can improve executive functions in the real world (in the classroom), academic outcomes not previously investigated, reduce bullying and peer ostracism, and increase teachers' and students' joy in being in the classroom. This first randomized controlled trial of Tools in Canada included 351 kindergarten children (mean age 5.2 years at entry; 51% female) in 18 public schools. Stratified randomization resulted in teachers and students in both groups being closely matched. Teachers in both groups received the same number of training hours and same funds for new materials. Outcome measures were pre and post standardized academic skill assessments and teacher online survey responses. This study replicated that Tools improves reading and shows for the first time that it improves writing (far exceeding levels the school districts had seen before), self-control and attention-regulation in the real world (e.g., time on task without supervision), reduces teacher burnout and children being ostracized or excluded, and increases the joy students and teachers experience in school. By Spring, Tools teachers were still enthusiastic about teaching; control teachers were exhausted. These results were not only better than the control group but also better than Tools teachers experienced the year before Tools. Thus, children in a kindergarten curriculum that emphasized play, improving self-regulation, working together and helping one another, and hands-on learning performed better academically, showed less bullying and peer ostracism and more kindness and helping behavior than students in more traditional classes, and teacher enthusiasm for teaching soared. Tools reduced initial disparities separating children, schools, and teachers.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222447
work_keys_str_mv AT adelediamond randomizedcontroltrialoftoolsofthemindmarkedbenefitstokindergartenchildrenandtheirteachers
AT chrislee randomizedcontroltrialoftoolsofthemindmarkedbenefitstokindergartenchildrenandtheirteachers
AT petersenften randomizedcontroltrialoftoolsofthemindmarkedbenefitstokindergartenchildrenandtheirteachers
AT andrealam randomizedcontroltrialoftoolsofthemindmarkedbenefitstokindergartenchildrenandtheirteachers
AT davidabbott randomizedcontroltrialoftoolsofthemindmarkedbenefitstokindergartenchildrenandtheirteachers
_version_ 1714815385011748864