JSET

Welcome to the Journal of Special Education Technology (JSET)
A publication of the Technology and Media Division of the Council for Exceptional Children

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Volume 18 Number 2

Effects of Video-Based and Applied Problems on the Procedural Math Skills of Average- and Low-Achieving Adolescents
Brian A. Bottge
University of Wisconsin–Madison
Mary Heinrichs
Wisconsin Center for Education Research
Shih-Yi Chan
National Tainan Teachers College, Taiwan
Zara Dee Mehta, Elizabeth Watson
University of Wisconsin–Madison

Abstract

The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of video-based, anchored instruction and applied problems on the ability of 11 low-achieving (LA) and 26 average-achieving (AA) students to solve computation and word problems. A repeated-measures design with staggered baselines was used to compare the performance of two groups of LA students and one group of AA students across three instructional conditions: (a) baseline instruction, (b) anchored instruction, and (c) instruction with applied problems. The performance of all three groups was higher during anchored instruction than during the baseline condition, but no differences were found between instruction with applied problems and the baseline condition. Qualitative analyses revealed that some LA students made fewer errors on computation and word problems during the anchored condition, whereas other students continued to make the same procedural mistakes. The findings suggest that some LA students can improve their procedural math skills as they work on solving engaging problems but other students need more explicit instruction to improve their computation skills and basic math understanding.

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