The
Sustainability of ClassWide Peer Tutoring:
An Effective Instructional Intervention
For Students with Disabilities in Inclusive
and Special Education Classroom Settings
ABSTRACT
This
proposal describes a research project focused on the contexts
that sustain quality use of classwide peer tutoring as an
effective instructional intervention for students with disabilities
in inclusive and special education classroom settings. For
the past 18 years, the Juniper Gardens Children's Project
has engaged in a program of research designed to improve the
literacy of children in urban and suburban schools who are
at-risk, culturally diverse, and who have disabilities. The
net product of this research has the ClassWide Peer Tutoring
(CWPT) program (Delquadri, Greenwood, Whorton, Carta, &
Hall, 1986; Greenwood, Carta, Kamps, & Hall, 1988). This
program has been the object of more than 25 experimental evaluations
generated by researchers at the Juniper Gardens Children's
Project or by others who have replicated or adapted the procedures
for classwide and school-wide models. This body of work has
shown that students at-risk and with disabilities achieve
spelling and reading skills at a faster rate, retain more
of what they learn, and make greater advances in social competence
when using CWPT compared to traditional instructional methods.
Emerging
from this work have been several new knowledge bases that
serve this application including: (a) data on instructional
effectiveness that includes a 12-year experimental -longitudinal
study, (b) the classroom-based CWPT program, (c) a school-wide
adoption and administrative model, and (d) technology-based
expert system (the CWPT Mentor) for assessing and improving
the fidelity of implementation. Collectively, this knowledge
base of research represents a significant contribution to
facilitating the academic achievement and social competence
of culturally diverse children with and without disabilities.
Unfortunately, however, we have not investigated the extent
to which our CWPT intervention programs are Sustained in project
sites beyond the term of time-limited external support and
assistance.
All
research activities in the proposed project are designed to
examine (a) the extent to which CWPT has been shown to be
effective and sustained beyond the existence of prior projects;
(b) factors (e.g., the nature and adaptations, etc.) that
influence the level of sustainability; (c) the type and support
strategies employed during initial implementation stages over
time; and (d) the extent of consonance or dissonance between
existing school policies and issues of sustainability, Using
quantitative and qualitative statistical methods, the expected
outcome will be a new knowledge base on school and classroom
contexts that sustain, quality use of CWPT interventions across
multiple sites.
The
products of this research will be: research evidence on the
effectiveness of CWPT in urban and suburban school districts,
new knowledge concerning the sustainability of CWPT interventions
in inclusive and special education classroom settings, how
to improve CWPT's wider-scale use in classrooms and how to
promote effectiveness, utilization, acceptability, and teacher
support, and the dissemination of research and practice knowledge
to teachers, school administrators, parents, and policymakers
at local, state, and federal levels.