Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude

abstract: Chi and Wylie’s (2014) Interactive Constructive Active Passive Framework (ICAP) was used as the foundation of a teacher led intervention using small group instruction with manipulatives during mathematics instruction to provide developmentally appropriate instruction to kindergarten studen...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Miller, Jessica Ann (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55472
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-55472
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-554722020-01-15T03:01:05Z Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude abstract: Chi and Wylie’s (2014) Interactive Constructive Active Passive Framework (ICAP) was used as the foundation of a teacher led intervention using small group instruction with manipulatives during mathematics instruction to provide developmentally appropriate instruction to kindergarten students in a rigorous academic program. This action research mixed-methods study was conducted in a full-day self-contained kindergarten classroom to ascertain the effects of this mathematics instruction method on students’ levels of engagement and attitudes. Over the course of six months, twenty mathematics lessons were recorded to gather data for the study. Quantitative data included measuring time-on-task, teacher behaviors ICAP level, student behaviors ICAP level, as well as a Student Attitude Survey that was conducted at the conclusion of the study. The Student Attitude Survey was presented in a modified Likert Scale format due to the age and reading ability of the participants. Qualitative data was gathered in the form of lesson transcripts. Twenty-two students and one classroom teacher participated in the study. Students ranged in age from five to six years old, and eleven participants (50%) were male. The results of the study showed that the use of small group hands-on instruction in mathematics had a positive effect on student engagement based on students’ time-on-task during the activity, as well as positive student attitudes toward mathematics as indicated on the Student Attitude Survey. Lesson transcripts and both teacher and student ICAP rubrics provided further support for the innovation. Dissertation/Thesis Miller, Jessica Ann (Author) Rotheram-Fuller, Erin (Advisor) Oakes, Wendy (Committee member) Wheeler, Melanie (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Elementary education Early childhood education Education Engagement Kindergarten Manipulatives Mathematics Small Group instruction Time-on-Task eng 132 pages Doctoral Dissertation Leadership and Innovation 2019 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55472 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2019
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Elementary education
Early childhood education
Education
Engagement
Kindergarten
Manipulatives
Mathematics
Small Group instruction
Time-on-Task
spellingShingle Elementary education
Early childhood education
Education
Engagement
Kindergarten
Manipulatives
Mathematics
Small Group instruction
Time-on-Task
Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude
description abstract: Chi and Wylie’s (2014) Interactive Constructive Active Passive Framework (ICAP) was used as the foundation of a teacher led intervention using small group instruction with manipulatives during mathematics instruction to provide developmentally appropriate instruction to kindergarten students in a rigorous academic program. This action research mixed-methods study was conducted in a full-day self-contained kindergarten classroom to ascertain the effects of this mathematics instruction method on students’ levels of engagement and attitudes. Over the course of six months, twenty mathematics lessons were recorded to gather data for the study. Quantitative data included measuring time-on-task, teacher behaviors ICAP level, student behaviors ICAP level, as well as a Student Attitude Survey that was conducted at the conclusion of the study. The Student Attitude Survey was presented in a modified Likert Scale format due to the age and reading ability of the participants. Qualitative data was gathered in the form of lesson transcripts. Twenty-two students and one classroom teacher participated in the study. Students ranged in age from five to six years old, and eleven participants (50%) were male. The results of the study showed that the use of small group hands-on instruction in mathematics had a positive effect on student engagement based on students’ time-on-task during the activity, as well as positive student attitudes toward mathematics as indicated on the Student Attitude Survey. Lesson transcripts and both teacher and student ICAP rubrics provided further support for the innovation. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Leadership and Innovation 2019
author2 Miller, Jessica Ann (Author)
author_facet Miller, Jessica Ann (Author)
title Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude
title_short Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude
title_full Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude
title_fullStr Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude
title_full_unstemmed Involve Me! Using Developmentally Appropriate Practices to Support a Rigorous Kindergarten Program: The Effects on Engagement and Attitude
title_sort involve me! using developmentally appropriate practices to support a rigorous kindergarten program: the effects on engagement and attitude
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.55472
_version_ 1719308481060667392