Effectiveness of a numeracy intelligent tutoring system in kindergarten: A conceptual replication

Author:

Grimes Ka ReneORCID,Park SoyoungORCID,McClelland Amanda,Park JiyeonORCID,Lee Young RiORCID,Nozari Maryam,Umer Zainab,Zaparolli Brenda,Bryant DianeORCID

Abstract

Intelligent Tutoring Systems are a genre of highly adaptive software providing individualized instruction. The current study was a conceptual replication of a previous randomized control trial that incorporated the intelligent tutoring system Native Numbers, a program designed for early numeracy instruction. As a conceptual replication, we kept the method of instruction, the demographics, the number of kindergarten classrooms (n = 3), and the same numeracy and intrinsic motivation screeners as the original study. We changed the time of year of instruction, changed the control group to a wait-control group, added a maintenance assessment for the first group of participants, and included a mathematical language assessment. Analysis of within- and between-group differences using repeated measures ANOVA indicated gains of numeracy were significant only after using Native Numbers (Partial Eta Square = 0.147). Results of intrinsic motivation and mathematical language were not significant. The effect size of numeracy achievement did not reach that of the original study (Partial Eta Square = 0.622). Here, we compared the two studies, discussed plausible reasons for differences in the magnitude of effect sizes, and provided suggestions for future research.

Publisher

Leibniz Institute for Psychology (ZPID)

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology,Numerical Analysis

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