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Evaluation of the Strategic Adolescent Reading Intervention (STARI), United States, 2020-2022 (ICPSR 39117)

Released/updated on: 2024-08-29
Geographic coverage: United States
Time period: 2020-01-01--2022-12-31, 2022-04-01--2022-06-01
Evaluation of the Strategic Adolescent Reading Intervention (STARI) is a year-long supplemental reading intervention that is intentionally designed to address the motivational barriers of middle school students who are reading below grade level. STARI is intended to be used for a full class period (45 minutes minimum), at least three days a week, in addition to regular English Language Arts. STARI has a Tier 1 (strong) Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) evidence rating based on a student-level randomized experiment conducted in school year 2013-14 in a northeastern state. To explore the replicability of these results, the effect of STARI was evaluated in 11 middle schools in two urban school districts in school year 2021-22, a school year when instruction was still periodically disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic. Eligible students were randomly assigned to the STARI class (n=215) or to a business-as-usual elective or reading class at their school (n=183). Students' English Language Arts (ELA) state test scores and their course marks at the end of the program year were obtained from school districts, and students' reading skills and reading motivation and self-efficacy were measured using a reading assessment and survey administered in Spring 2022. This evaluation of STARI was funded by an Education and Innovation and Research (EIR) mid-phase grant from the US Department of Education.
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Partially restricted
Simple Crosstabs

Impacts and Implementation of the i3-Funded Scale-Up of Success for All (ICPSR 36387)

Released/updated on: 2016-09-12
Geographic coverage: United States
Time period: 2011-01-01--2014-01-01

The Impacts and Implementation of the i3-Funded Scale-Up of Success for All study examined the implementation and impacts of a whole-school reform model, Success for All (SFA), which seeks to increase reading proficiency among students in elementary schools serving low-income children, as this model was scaled up under an Investing in Innovation (i3) grant from the United States Department of Education. The impact evaluation used a cluster random assignment design in which 37 schools in five school districts were selected at random either to implement SFA (the program group schools) or to put in place their business-as-usual reading program (the control group schools). This collection contains Parts 1 to 7 for public use; and Part 8 for restricted use only.

In Part 1: Primary Student Sample data, children who began kindergarten in sampled schools and remained in them through second grade were assessed using standardized assessments of phonics skills, reading fluency, and comprehension. In Part 2: Auxiliary Sample, additional analyses examined third-year impacts on reading skills for all second graders, whether or not they remained continuously enrolled in the study schools, and for students in grades 3 through 5. The analysis also examined impacts for subgroups defined by ethnicity, early literacy skills measured upon entry into kindergarten, and other variables.

Part 3: School Achievement Snapshot Data contain implementation data for analysis using an instrument created by SFA's developers that measures the extent to which program elements were put in place at each program group at the end of each year. This instrument was utilized to assess fidelity to the program model. The implementation analysis was also informed by principal (Part 5: Principal Survey) and teacher surveys (Part 4: Teacher Survey) in all schools, as well by logs (Part 6: Teacher Log) that asked teachers to document their instructional practices in early reading classes. These data, collected in all three study years, make it possible to measure implementation over the study period and to compare program group schools and control group schools on a variety of dimensions.

Part 7: Scale-Up Sample Data provided data on the schools that adopted SFA (and those which were approached, but did not adopt), and schools that adopted before the Investing in Innovations grant. Part 8 is the restricted version of Part 7, which retains geographic location variables.

Curated
Simple Crosstabs

Survey of Cultural Programs for Adults in Public Libraries 1998 [United States] (ICPSR 35241)

Released/updated on: 2015-05-27
Geographic coverage: United States
Time period: 1997-01-01--1998-01-01
This data set offers information on cultural programs for adults in public libraries in the United States during 1997-98. The study was conducted between February 8 and May 1, 1998 by the Library Research Center in the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois, Champaign-Urbana. Surveys were sent by mail to a sample of 1,500 public libraries serving populations of 5,000 people or more - 1,229 completed surveys were returned. The sampling procedure consisted of an initial and two follow-up mailings, the last by certified mail. Data was collected on the types of adult cultural programming offered at each library, program attendance and funding, collaboration with other organizations on cultural programs, the cultural role of the library, and the relative availability of cultural programming in the community served by the library.