A Virtual Adaptation of the Taped Problems Intervention for Increasing Math Fact Fluency

In response to restrictions on visitors within school buildings during the COVID-19 pandemic, the evidence-based math fact fluency procedure known as the taped problems intervention was adapted for use in a virtual setting. The present study used a multiple-probe across participants design to evalua...

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Veröffentlicht in:School psychology 2022-09, Vol.37 (5), p.388-398
Hauptverfasser: McCallum, Elizabeth, Schmitt, Ara J., Aspiranti, Kathleen B., Mahony, Kristen E., Honaker, Alyson C., Christy, Laurie A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In response to restrictions on visitors within school buildings during the COVID-19 pandemic, the evidence-based math fact fluency procedure known as the taped problems intervention was adapted for use in a virtual setting. The present study used a multiple-probe across participants design to evaluate the effects of the adapted intervention on the subtraction fact fluency of three elementary school students with varying degrees of math difficulties. Researchers also measured whether fluency gains would generalize to subtraction fact family problems that were not targeted within the study procedures. Visual analysis of results indicated math fluency improvements across all students, regardless of initial performance level, but no evidence of generalization effects for any participant. Additionally, to further investigate intervention effects, two effect size measures were calculated (WC-SMD and NAP) and each participant's rate of improvement was measured in two ways. Slopes (digits correct per minute [DCM] gains per session) of baseline and intervention phases were compared, and DCM gains per intervention time were investigated. Discussion focuses on implications for providing academic interventions in virtual learning environments, the importance of direct instruction for subtraction fact fluency, as well as future directions for researchers. Impact and Implications This study suggests that a commonly used evidence-based math fact fluency intervention can be successfully adapted for use in a virtual setting for elementary school students experiencing math difficulties. The intervention led to substantial fluency gains across participants, and findings demonstrated that the adapted intervention could be effectively implemented with fewer resources than the traditional procedure. A wide array of implications for providing effective virtual academic interventions across a variety of settings and student populations are discussed.
ISSN:2578-4218
2578-4226
DOI:10.1037/spq0000510