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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dailey, John T., Neyman, Clinton A., Jr.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Language:en
Published: 1965
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED024449
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author Dailey, John T.
Neyman, Clinton A., Jr.
author_facet Dailey, John T.
Neyman, Clinton A., Jr.
Dailey, John T.
Neyman, Clinton A., Jr.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents An Evaluation of the Language Arts Program of the District of Columbia. Final Report. Dailey, John T. Neyman, Clinton A., Jr. Class Size Comparative Testing Control Groups Elementary Schools Factor Analysis Family Income Kindergarten Kindergarten Children Language Arts Program Evaluation Reading Tests School Size Standardized Tests Story Telling Teaching Experience Verbal Ability In an evaluation of a language arts program for oral and written facility and comprehension among children of an urban culture, 262 children in kindergarten comprised the experimental group, and 369 students served as controls. Children in both groups were presented with three pictures and instructed to tell a story about each. Observers rated speech facility and overall verbalization. Pretests and posttests were given to both groups. The results showed that students in experimental schools do significantly better in word meaning, language facility, picture vocabulary, and the Merrill-Palmer Scale and relatively better on English Error Score and in reading than their readiness score predicted. They made significantly fewer errors on the Dailey Language Facility Test. School characteristics and school success were compared with data from another study. It was found that teachers' salaries, teachers' experience, number of books in the school library, and per-pupil expenditure are more closely related to school success than are school size, average class size, age of building and suburban location. Family income was most closely related. The language arts program was found to be needed and successful and should be extended to the prekindergarten level. A reevaluation should be made in a few years. (JS)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED024449
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1965
record_format eric
spellingShingle An Evaluation of the Language Arts Program of the District of Columbia. Final Report.
Dailey, John T.
Neyman, Clinton A., Jr.
Class Size
Comparative Testing
Control Groups
Elementary Schools
Factor Analysis
Family Income
Kindergarten
Kindergarten Children
Language Arts
Program Evaluation
Reading Tests
School Size
Standardized Tests
Story Telling
Teaching Experience
Verbal Ability
An Evaluation of the Language Arts Program of the District of Columbia. Final Report. Dailey, John T. Neyman, Clinton A., Jr. Class Size Comparative Testing Control Groups Elementary Schools Factor Analysis Family Income Kindergarten Kindergarten Children Language Arts Program Evaluation Reading Tests School Size Standardized Tests Story Telling Teaching Experience Verbal Ability In an evaluation of a language arts program for oral and written facility and comprehension among children of an urban culture, 262 children in kindergarten comprised the experimental group, and 369 students served as controls. Children in both groups were presented with three pictures and instructed to tell a story about each. Observers rated speech facility and overall verbalization. Pretests and posttests were given to both groups. The results showed that students in experimental schools do significantly better in word meaning, language facility, picture vocabulary, and the Merrill-Palmer Scale and relatively better on English Error Score and in reading than their readiness score predicted. They made significantly fewer errors on the Dailey Language Facility Test. School characteristics and school success were compared with data from another study. It was found that teachers' salaries, teachers' experience, number of books in the school library, and per-pupil expenditure are more closely related to school success than are school size, average class size, age of building and suburban location. Family income was most closely related. The language arts program was found to be needed and successful and should be extended to the prekindergarten level. A reevaluation should be made in a few years. (JS)
title An Evaluation of the Language Arts Program of the District of Columbia. Final Report.
topic Class Size
Comparative Testing
Control Groups
Elementary Schools
Factor Analysis
Family Income
Kindergarten
Kindergarten Children
Language Arts
Program Evaluation
Reading Tests
School Size
Standardized Tests
Story Telling
Teaching Experience
Verbal Ability
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED024449