All Students Can Succeed - by Jean Stockard & Timothy W Wood & Cristy Coughlin (Paperback)
About this item
Highlights
- Accessible to policy makers, teachers, and parents while containing essential information for researchers, All Students Can Succeed summarizes an extensive meta-analysis of 50 years of research on Direct Instruction.
- About the Author: Jean Stockard is a sociologist.
- 310 Pages
- Education, Curricula
Description
About the Book
Accessible to policy makers, teachers, and parents while containing essential information for researchers, All Students Can Succeed summarizes an extensive meta-analysis of 50 years of research on Direct Instruction. The authors report strong, consistent effects, substantially...Book Synopsis
Accessible to policy makers, teachers, and parents while containing essential information for researchers, All Students Can Succeed summarizes an extensive meta-analysis of 50 years of research on Direct Instruction. The authors report strong, consistent effects, substantially larger than those from other programs.Review Quotes
All Students Can Succeed describes how to break out of the stagnant levels of US student achievement, particularly with underserved students. Siegfreid Engelmann's Direct Instruction programs were the first to fully incorporate systematic and explicit principles. Beginning in the 1960s and continuing over five decades, these programs, when implemented with fidelity, showed outstanding gains in student achievement and self-confidence, according to both practical (with large effect sizes) and statistical criteria. In contrast, not one study showed negative effects that met both the practical and statistical criteria. All Students Can Succeed explains why these programs were and continue to be so successful, why they are not utilized on a large scale in American schools, and most importantly how they might be used in future years to dramatically reduce school failure and accelerate academic and social success.
This compelling and thorough treatment of decades of research on Direct Instruction is jaw-dropping. Anyone who has seen the power of Engelmann's Direct Instruction programs will not be surprised by the magnitude of the findings delineated in this book, but will be in awe of the breadth and depth of the research demonstrating what we practitioners already know: Direct Instruction programs teach all students with unparalleled effectiveness and efficiency. Educators should read this book and proceed accordingly.
About the Author
Jean Stockard is a sociologist.
Timothy W. Wood is a historian. Cristy Coughlin is an educational psychologist. Caitlin Rasplica Khoury is a licensed child psychologist.