| Literature DB >> 30627854 |
George W Rebok1,2, Jeanine M Parisi3, Jeremy S Barron4, Michelle C Carlson3,5, Ike Diibor6, Kevin D Frick7, Linda P Fried8, Tara L Gruenewald9, Jin Huang5, Sylvia McGill10, Christine M Ramsey3, William A Romani5, Teresa E Seeman11, Erwin Tan12, Elizabeth K Tanner5,13,14, Li Xing5, Qian-Li Xue5,4.
Abstract
This article reports on the impact of the Experience Corps® (EC) Baltimore program, an intergenerational, school-based program aimed at improving academic achievement and reducing disruptive school behavior in urban, elementary school students in Kindergarten through third grade (K-3). Teams of adult volunteers aged 60 and older were placed in public schools, serving 15 h or more per week, to perform meaningful and important roles to improve the educational outcomes of children and the health and well-being of volunteers. Findings indicate no significant impact of the EC program on standardized reading or mathematical achievement test scores among children in grades 1-3 exposed to the program. K-1st grade students in EC schools had fewer principal office referrals compared to K-1st grade students in matched control schools during their second year in the EC program; second graders in EC schools had fewer suspensions and expulsions than second graders in non-EC schools during their first year in the EC program. In general, both boys and girls appeared to benefit from the EC program in school behavior. The results suggest that a volunteer engagement program for older adults can be modestly effective for improving selective aspects of classroom behavior among elementary school students in under-resourced, urban schools, but there were no significant improvements in academic achievement. More work is needed to identify individual- and school-level factors that may help account for these results.Entities:
Keywords: Academic achievement; Childhood education; Early intervention; Older adult volunteers; School behavior
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30627854 PMCID: PMC6520169 DOI: 10.1007/s11121-018-0972-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Sci ISSN: 1389-4986