Title: Parents Encourage Pupils (PEP)
1Parents Encourage Pupils (PEP)
- A Targeted Tier 2 Intervention for Students At
Risk for Reading Difficulties - Shuck, Ulsh, Platt (1983)
- See PEP Handout 1
- Summary of PEP
2PEP Rationale
- Urban children dont achieve in reading at a
comparable level to suburban children. - Parents reinforcement of skills taught at school
have a direct effect on childrens achievement. - Parents from lower SES do not make as much
contact with schools as middle or higher SES
parents maybe lack confidence, communication
skills, or knowledge about learning processes. - When school staff assist parents, their
involvement in academic programs increase
resulting in increased student achievement.
3PEP Target Population
- Low SES students from inner city schools
- All students behind at least 2 grade levels in
reading, of average intelligence or above, and
served at a reading resource laboratory at school - Experimental Group
- 75 randomly selected students grades 3-5
- Control Group
- Comparable did not receive PEP
4Implementation ofParent Encourage Pupils (PEP)
- See PEP Handout 2
- for list of Implementation Procedures
5PEP Intervention ProceduresSee PEP Handout 2
- Students participate in daily 30-minute reading
lab over school year. - The lab provides
- daily homework,
- word lists,
- reading games,
- books for tutoring activities at home
- calendars to track completed activities.
- Children chose one or more of four activities to
do with their parents each day at home.
6PEP Intervention Procedures
- The intervention materials are provided to
parents - During parent conferences
- Sent home if parents could not attend the
conferences. - Self-explanatory calendars given to parents with
clear directions for how to reward and note the
completion of the childs selected daily activity
7PEP Directions to Parents
- You can help your child become a better reader by
listening and helping her to do at least one of
the following activities available to her in the
reading lab - Read a book
- Reading homework
- Read a word list
- Play reading games
- Each activity earns 10 points
8PEP Directions to Parents(contd) See PEP
Handout 3
- After work is completed
- Circle A, B, C or D on the calendar to show the
work done by your child. - If your child does more than one activity, circle
each letter that applies. - As a reward for doing at least one of the above
activities, fill in the Happy Face with a pen
or pencil. - Please return this calendar to the lab at the end
of the month.
9PEP Example Completed Calendar
Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday
A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D
A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D A B C D
10PEP Intervention ProceduresSee PEP Handout 4
- After the child completes the daily activity, the
parent fills in the happy face on the calendar. - Children return the home activity tracking
calendar to school each month. - The reading lab teachers keep a school activity
tracking calendar at school. - Points are recorded for completion of reading
assignments in class and combined with points for
activities earned at home.
11PEP Teacher Tracking Calendar
5-50 Prescription Sheet 5-50 Dolch Words
10 Homework 5-25 Written Book Report
5-25 Poems
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Total
Week 1 Homework 20 Book report 15 Homework-10 Prescrp. Sheet-20 Homework-10 Poem-10 Homework-20 Dolch words 15 Homework Fri/Sat -20 Poem-10 150
12PEP Intervention Procedurescontinued
- Each month students can save points or purchase a
prize from the class store. - Two levels of prize values
- 600 points - pencils, jacks, or other small item
- 900-1,500 points- baseball hats, footballs,
kites, books - Most prizes donated by local stores, civic groups
and parents. - Parent and student post-treatment acceptability
and outcome surveys may be completed. - Student Survey See PEP Handout 5
- Parent Survey See PEP Handout 6
- For Integrity Checklist see PEP Handout 7
13About the Parents Encourage Pupils (PEP) Studies
- Shuck, Ulsh, and Platt (1983)
14PEP Intervention Procedurescontinued
- Parent-teacher conferences held 3 times
beginning, middle (Jan.), and end of year. - At the conference the teacher gives parents a
brief written progress report - Total number of books read,
- Teacher and parent comments,
- Work completed in the lab,
- Homework completed
- The reports are sent home for comments and
signatures for parents unable to attend.
15PEP Study Descriptions
- Across entire school year (180 days), daily
homework assigned by reading lab done with
parents at home - Students participated in reading lab 30 minutes
daily - Behavior modification plan reinforced students
home and school reading assignment completion - Experimental and Control Groups
- Pre-Post Test
16PEP Participants
- Experimental Group
- Parents of target students
- 75 randomly selected students grades 3-5 who were
at least 2 grade levels behind - Control Group
- 75 Comparable peers did not receive PEP
- All Study Subjects
- Average or above IQs
- Low SES
17PEP Intervention Procedures
- Students participated in reading lab 30 minutes
daily - Lab met with parents at beginning, middle and end
of school year - Parents provided with materials and tracking
calendar for completion of 1 or more of 4 daily
home activities supporting reading - Behavior modification plan reinforced students
home and school reading assignment completion
18PEP Research Question
- Does Parent Involvement increase students
reading achievement?
19PEP Evaluation Measures
- Pre-Post Testing with the Stanford Achievement
Test Reading Comprehension subtest - Slosson Intelligence Test used as quick screener
of intelligence for subject selection
20PEP Overall Results
- Reading Achievement
- Post-Test reading comprehension scores on the
Standford Achievement Test for students who
received parent tutoring were significantly
higher than those that did not receive parent
tutoring.
21PEP Research Limitations
- No cultural information provided
- Limited information on how parents were trained
or informed. - Measures too infrequent to inform intervention
needs.