6533b831fe1ef96bd1299afa

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Teachers adapt their instruction according to students’ academic performance

Jaana ViljarantaAsko TolvanenJari-erik NurmiKaisa Aunola

subject

media_common.quotation_subjectTeaching methodExperimental and Cognitive PsychologyAcademic achievementEducationEducational researchReading (process)PedagogyDevelopmental and Educational PsychologyMathematics educationPsychologyReading skillsta515media_common

description

This study examined the extent to which a student’s academic performance in first grade contributes to the active instruction given by a teacher to a particular student. To investigate this, 105 first graders were tested in mathematics and reading in the fall and spring of their first school year. At the same time points, their teachers filled in a questionnaire on five successive days on the active instruction they have given a particular student. The results showed that the poorer the performance in reading a student showed in fall, the more active instruction teachers reported giving a student in spring. Moreover, the poorer the performance in mathematics a student showed in fall, the more active instruction less-experienced teachers reported giving that particular student in spring. The giving of active instruction by less-experienced teachers also contributed to an increase in children’s subsequent performance in mathematics.

10.1080/01443410.2012.675645http://juuli.fi/Record/0246208412