Creative Curriculum
Creative Curriculum
Creative Curriculum
August 2009
Research2
Effectiveness
The Creative Curriculum was found to have no discernible effects on oral language, print knowledge, phonological processing,
or math.
Rating of
effectiveness
Improvement
index4
Print
Oral language knowledge
Phonological
processing
Early reading
and writing
Cognition
Math
No discernible
effects
No discernible
effects
na
na
No discernible
effects
Average: +3
Average: +3
Average: 2
na
percentile points percentile points percentile points
na
Average: +4
percentile points
No discernible
effects
Range: 5 to +8
percentile points
na = not applicable
1. The descriptive information for this program was obtained from a publicly available source: the programs website (http://www.teachingstrategies.com/page/
CCPS_Overview.cfm, downloaded July 2009). The WWC requests developers to review the program description sections for accuracy from their perspective.
Further verification of the accuracy of the descriptive information for this program is beyond the scope of this review.
2. The studies in this report were reviewed using WWC Evidence Standards, Version 1.0 (see the WWC Standards).
3. The evidence presented in this report is based on available research. Findings and conclusions may change as new research becomes available.
4. These numbers show the average and range of student-level improvement indices for all findings across the studies.
August 2009
Absence of conflict
of interest
The PCER Consortium (2008) study summarized in this intervention report had numerous contributors, including staff of
Mathematica Policy Research, Inc. (MPR). Because the principal
investigator for the WWC Early Childhood Education review is
Additional program
information
Scope of use
No information on the scope of use or the demographic characteristics of program users is available.
Teaching
The Creative Curriculum is an early childhood curriculum
designed to foster childrens social/emotional, physical, cognitive, and language development and to enhance learning in literacy, math, science, social studies, the arts, and technology. The
curriculum includes information on childrens development and
learning, classroom organization and structure, teaching strategies, instructional goals and objectives, and guidance on how to
engage families in their childrens learning. Intentional, teacherguided learning experiences are provided in large and small
group settings. Children are offered learning opportunities in the
following interest areas: blocks, dramatic play, toys and games,
art, library, discovery, sand and water, music and movement,
cooking, computers, and outdoors. The curriculum describes
the learning that occurs through play in each area, the corresponding stages of play, and teacher interactions to promote
and scaffold childrens learning. The curriculum incorporates the
use of studies, which are project-based investigations focused
on meaningful science and social studies topics that provide
children with an opportunity to apply skills in literacy, math, the
arts, and technology. The Creative Curriculum also emphasizes
WWC Intervention Report
Cost
The curriculum materials can be purchased separately depending on program needs with prices ranging from $12.95 for an
individual Study Starter to $49.95 for The Creative Curriculum
for Preschool, 4th edition. Preschool assessment materials cost
$114.95 for 25 children. The Creative Curriculum does not require
any special materials or manipulatives other than those that may
be found in most well-equipped preschool classrooms; however,
a series of literacy and mathematics kits containing materials that
align with curriculum activities are available for $499.95 each.
Teaching Strategies also offers The Creative Curriculum
Classroom Resource Kit, which provides all the resources
necessary to implement the program in a classroom. The kit
contains the following materials: The Creative Curriculum for
Preschool (2 copies), The Creative Curriculum for Preschool
in Action DVD (1 copy), The Creative Curriculum for Preschool
Implementation Checklist (1 copy), Setting Up a Classroom for
20 Preschool Children (1 copy), The Creative Curriculum for
Preschool Developmental Continuum Assessment Toolkit for
Ages 35 (1 toolkit), 20 subscriptions to CreativeCurriculum.
net, The Power of Observation, 2nd edition (1 copy), Literacy:
The Creative Curriculum Approach (1 copy), Mathematics:
August 2009
Additional program
information (continued)
The Creative Curriculum Approach (1 copy), The Creative Curriculum Study Starters: A Step-by-Step Guide to Project-Based
Investigations in Science and Social Studies (complete set of 12
topics and the Teachers Guide), Using The Creative Curriculum
LearningGames With Families: A Teachers Guide (1 copy), A
Research
5. The study was part of the Preschool Curriculum Evaluation Research Consortium (2008) that evaluated a total of 14 preschool curricula, including
The Creative Curriculum, in comparison to the respective control conditions.
August 2009
Research (continued)
Extent of evidence
The WWC categorizes the extent of evidence in each domain as
small or medium to large (see the WWC Procedures and Standards
Handbook, Appendix G). The extent of evidence takes into account
the number of studies and the total sample size across the studies
that meet WWC evidence standards with or without reservations.7
The WWC considers the extent of evidence for The Creative
Curriculum to be medium to large for oral language, print
knowledge, phonological processing, and math. No studies that
meet WWC evidence standards with or without reservations
examined the effectiveness of The Creative Curriculum in the
early reading and writing or the cognition domains.
Effectiveness
Findings
The WWC review of interventions for Early Childhood Education
addresses child outcomes in six domains: oral language, print
knowledge, phonological processing, early reading and writing,
cognition, and math. The studies included in this report cover
four domains: oral language, print knowledge, phonological
processing, and math. The findings below present the authors
estimates and WWC-calculated estimates of the size and the
statistical significance of the effects of The Creative Curriculum
on children.8
Oral language. Three studies presented findings in the oral language domain. PCER Consortium [Chapter 3] (2008) analyzed the
effectiveness of The Creative Curriculum on oral language using
6. To calculate effects of The Creative Curriculum, the WWC aggregated means and standard deviations across three comparison curricula: High/Scope,
High Reach, and other.
7. The extent of evidence categorization was developed to tell readers how much evidence was used to determine the intervention rating, focusing on the
number and size of studies. Additional factors associated with a related conceptexternal validity, such as the students demographics and the types
of settings in which studies took placeare not taken into account for the categorization. Information about how the extent of evidence rating was
determined for The Creative Curriculum is in Appendix A6.
8. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools and for multiple comparisons. For an explanation, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate
the statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix C for clustering and WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook,
Appendix D for multiple comparisons. No correction for clustering was needed for the studies by the PCER Consortium (PCER Consortium [Chapters 2
and 3], 2008) because its analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM. A correction for clustering was needed for the Henry et al. (2004) study, so the
significance levels in this report may differ from those reported in the original study. No corrections for multiple comparisons were needed in any of the
studies because the findings were not statistically significant.
August 2009
Effectiveness (continued)
Effectiveness (continued)
the Shape Composition task. The authors report, and the WWC
confirms, that differences between The Creative Curriculum and
control groups are not statistically significant or large enough to
be substantively important on any of these measures. According
to WWC criteria, this study shows indeterminate effects on math.
PCER Consortium [Chapter 2] (2008) also examined the
effectiveness of The Creative Curriculum on math using the
WJ-III Applied Problems subtest, the Child Math Assessment
Abbreviated, and Shape Composition task. The authors report,
and the WWC confirms, that differences between The Creative
Curriculum and control groups are not statistically significant
or large enough to be substantively important on any of these
measures. According to WWC criteria, this study shows indeterminate effects on math.
Henry et al. (2004) compared children in preschool classes
using The Creative Curriculum to children in preschool classes
using High/Scope, High Reach, and several other curricula.
They report that at the end of preschool, no differences in the
math domain emerged between children who were in preschool
classrooms using The Creative Curriculum and children who
Improvement index
The WWC computes an improvement index for each individual
finding. In addition, within each outcome domain, the WWC
computes an average improvement index for each study and an
average improvement index across studies (see WWC Procedures
and Standards Handbook, Appendix F). The improvement index
represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and the percentile rank of
the average student in the comparison condition. Unlike the rating
of effectiveness, the improvement index is entirely based on the
size of the effect, regardless of the statistical significance of the
effect, the study design, or the analysis. The improvement index
can take on values between 50 and +50, with positive numbers
denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
Rating of effectiveness
The WWC rates the effects of an intervention in a given
outcome domain as positive, potentially positive, mixed, no
discernible effects, potentially negative, or negative. The rating
of effectiveness takes into account four factors: the quality of
the research design, the statistical significance of the findings
(as calculated by the WWC), the size of the difference between
participants in the intervention and the comparison conditions,
and the consistency in findings across studies (see the WWC
Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix E).
August 2009
Summary
The WWC reviewed eight studies of The Creative Curriculum.
One of these studies meets WWC evidence standards, and two
of these studies meet WWC evidence standards with reservations. Five studies do not meet either WWC evidence standards
August 2009
References (continued)
August 2009
Appendix
Appendix A1.1 Study characteristics: Preschool Curriculum Evaluation Research Consortium, 2008 (randomized controlled trial)
Characteristic
Description
Study citation
Preschool Curriculum Evaluation Research (PCER) Consortium. (2008). Creative Curriculum: University of North Carolina at Charlotte. In Effects of preschool curriculum
programs on school readiness (pp. 5564). Washington, DC: National Center for Education Research, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education.
Participants
This randomized controlled study, conducted during the 2003/04 and 2004/05 school years, included an intervention group that implemented The Creative Curriculum and a
control group that continued using the teacher-developed, nonspecific curriculum. Both teachers and children were randomized within the centers. During the pilot year, teachers
were blocked on education and teacher certification status, then randomly assigned within blocks to treatment or control groups. Thus, each of the five participating Head Start
centers included both The Creative Curriculum and control classrooms. A total of 20 classrooms (10 in North Carolina and 10 in Georgia) were randomly assigned in 2002/03, the
pilot year. In the following year, which was the year of the PCER study, two North Carolina classrooms were dropped because they participated in the states More at Four program,
had degreed teachers, and had excessive teacher attrition (10% attrition at the assignment level). Children within a center were sorted into blocks based on gender, disability
status, and ethnicity. They were then randomly assigned to The Creative Curriculum or control classrooms. Participants included 18 classrooms (9 Creative Curriculum and 9
control) and 190 children at baseline (95 Creative Curriculum and 95 control). The spring follow-up data collection included 171 children (90 Creative Curriculum and 81 control).
Overall attrition at follow-up was 10.0%. At baseline, children in the study were 4.5 years of age on average; 46% were boys; and 85% were African-American, 8% were Hispanic,
and 3% were white. Additional findings reflecting students outcomes at the end of kindergarten can be found in Appendices A4.1A4.4.
Setting
The Creative Curriculum study was conducted in a total of 18 full-day Head Start preschool classrooms in five Head Start centers (three centers with 8 classrooms in North
Carolina and two centers with 10 classrooms in Georgia).
Intervention
The Creative Curriculum is a comprehensive preschool curriculum for children ages 35. The curriculum addresses four areas of development: social/emotional, physical,
cognitive, and language. The Creative Curriculum requires the physical space of the classroom to be structured into 10 interest areas (blocks, dramatic play, toys and games, art,
library, discovery, sand and water, music and movement, cooking, and computers). Curriculum content includes literacy, mathematics, science, social studies, the arts, technology,
and skills such as observing, exploring, and problem solving. Teachers conduct ongoing child assessments employing a Developmental Checklist. Each classrooms fidelity to the
curriculum was rated on a four-point scale ranging from not at all (0) to high (3). The average score for The Creative Curriculum classrooms was 2.11 on this measure.
Comparison
Business-as-usual using teacher-developed, nonspecific curricula. Control teachers classrooms were rated with the same fidelity measure used in The Creative Curriculum
classrooms, which ranged from 0 to 3. The average score for the control classrooms using this measure was 1.5.
Primary outcomes
and measurement
The outcome domains assessed were childrens oral language, print knowledge, phonological processing, and math. Oral language was assessed with the Peabody Picture
Vocabulary TestIII (PPVT-III) and the Test of Language DevelopmentPrimary: III (TOLD-P:3) Grammatic Understanding subtest. Print knowledge was assessed with the Test of
Early Reading AbilityIII (TERA-3), the Woodcock-JohnsonIII (WJ-III) Letter-Word Identification subtest, and the WJ-III Spelling subtest. Phonological processing was assessed
with the Preschool Comprehensive Test of Phonological and Print Processing (Pre-CTOPPP) Elision subtest. Math was assessed with the WJ-III Applied Problems subtest, the Child
Math AssessmentAbbreviated (CMA-A), and the Shape Composition task. For a more detailed description of these outcome measures, see Appendices A2.1A2.4.
Staff/teacher training
Teachers in The Creative Curriculum treatment group were in their second year of implementing the program at the time of the evaluation. The research team provided
refresher training to the treatment group teachers. Four (North Carolina) or five (Georgia) training periods were provided to teachers. Training was delivered in one half-day or
one full-day session (both NC and GA teachers received the same training in total). Training topics included choosing and planning in-depth topics of study; providing materials
and interactions for content learning in literacy, math, science, social studies, the arts, and technology; and observation-based assessment of childrens learning. Training
included a mix of lecture, small group projects, video viewing, and hands-on practical applications. Technical assistance was provided to teachers throughout the school year.
August 2009
Appendix A1.2 Study characteristics: Preschool Curriculum Evaluation Research Consortium, 2008 (randomized controlled trial)
Characteristic
Description
Study citation
Preschool Curriculum Evaluation Research (PCER) Consortium (2008). Bright Beginnings and Creative Curriculum: Vanderbilt University. In Effects of preschool curriculum
programs on school readiness (ch. 2, pp. 4154). Washington, DC: National Center for Education Research, Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education.
Participants
This randomized controlled study, conducted during the 2003/04 and 2004/05 school years, included three intervention groups: The Creative Curriculum, Bright Beginnings,
and a control group. Thirty-six full-day prekindergarten classrooms in 28 public schools were recruited and blocked into groups of three by matching them on composite factors
for demographic characteristics (urban/rural, percentages of races other than white) and achievement (percentage receiving free lunch and reading, language, mathematics, and
science achievement scores). Within each block, one preschool was randomly assigned to The Creative Curriculum, one to Bright Beginnings, and one to the control group. The
manuscript notes that the researchers randomly assigned the classrooms to three conditions; however, all classrooms in a preschool were assigned to the same study condition.
Subsequent to randomization, 21 of the 36 classrooms (7 from each of the three groups) were randomly selected to participate in the national PCER study of The Creative Curriculum, Bright Beginnings, and a control group. All 36 classrooms participated in the local investigators pilot-year study during the first year. Following the pilot year, and prior to
starting the national PCER study, 8 of the 21 PCER classrooms dropped out of the study, leaving 4 Creative Curriculum, 5 Bright Beginnings, and 4 control classrooms (attrition
of 43%, 29%, and 43% respectively). The 8 dropout classrooms were replaced by randomly selecting 8 from the 15 classrooms that had not been selected to participate in the
national PCER study, including 2 Bright Beginnings, 3 Creative Curriculum, and 3 control classrooms, restoring the sample of classrooms to 7 in each of the three intervention
groups. The study demonstrated the baseline equivalence of the analytic sample of children in the intervention and control groups. At baseline, children in the study averaged 4.5
years of age; 52% were male; and 11% were Hispanic, 80% were white, and 7% were African-American. Child-level attrition was 6.7% overall; 8.6% in The Creative Curriculum
classrooms and 5% in the comparison group. The analysis sample included 93 children in 7 Creative Curriculum classrooms and 100 children in 7 control classrooms. Additional
findings reflecting students outcomes at the end of kindergarten can be found in Appendices A4.1A4.4.
Setting
The Creative Curriculum study was conducted in prekindergarten classes in 14 public schools (7 Creative Curriculum and 7 control) from seven county school districts
in Tennessee.
Intervention
The Creative Curriculum is a comprehensive preschool curriculum for children ages 35. The curriculum addresses four areas of development: social/emotional, physical,
cognitive, and language. The Creative Curriculum requires the physical space of the classroom to be structured into 10 interest areas (blocks, dramatic play, toys and
games, art, library, discovery, sand and water, music and movement, cooking, and computers). Curriculum content includes literacy, mathematics, science, social studies,
the arts, technology, and skills such as observing, exploring, and problem solving. Teachers conduct ongoing child assessments employing a Developmental Checklist. Each
classrooms fidelity to the curriculum was rated on a four-point scale ranging from not at all (0) to high (3). The average score for The Creative Curriculum classrooms was
2.11 on this measure.
Comparison
Business-as-usual using teacher-developed, nonspecific curricula with a focus on basic school readiness. Control teachers classrooms were rated with the same fidelity
measure used in The Creative Curriculum classrooms, which ranged from 0 to 3. The average score for the control classrooms using this measure was 2.0.
Primary outcomes
and measurement
The outcome domains assessed were childrens oral language, print knowledge, phonological processing, and math. Oral language was assessed with the Peabody Picture
Vocabulary TestIII (PPVT-III) and the Test of Language DevelopmentPrimary: III (TOLD-P:3) Grammatic Understanding subtest. Print knowledge was assessed with the Test of
Early Reading AbilityIII (TERA-3), the Woodcock-JohnsonIII (WJ-III) Letter-Word Identification subtest, and the WJ-III Spelling subtest. Phonological processing was assessed
with the Preschool Comprehensive Test of Phonological and Print Processing (Pre-CTOPPP) Elision subtest. Math was assessed with the WJ-III Applied Problems subtest, the Child
Math AssessmentAbbreviated (CMA-A), and the Shape Composition task. For a more detailed description of these outcome measures, see Appendices A2.1A2.4.
Staff/teacher training
The Creative Curriculum was implemented in treatment schools in fall 2002 (pilot-study year) and in fall 2003 for additional teachers participating in the intervention year.
Treatment group teachers received 2.5 full days of training and had access to ongoing curriculum implementation throughout the school year. Onsite consultation to teachers
was provided four times during the school year, twice by trained Tennessee staff members and twice by curriculum trainers. Consultation visits typically included a classroom
observation, an opportunity for teachers to ask questions about the curriculum, and implementation feedback from the trainer. No specific additional professional development
activities for control group teachers are described.
August 2009
10
Appendix A1.3 Study characteristics: Henry, Ponder, Rickman, Mashburn, Henderson, & Gordon, 2004 (quasi-experimental design)
Characteristic
Description
Study citation
Henry, G. T., Ponder, B. D., Rickman, D. K., Mashburn, A. J., Henderson, L. W., & Gordon, C. S. (2004). An evaluation of the implementation of Georgias pre-K program:
Report of the findings from the Georgia early childhood study (200203). Atlanta, GA: Georgia State University, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies.
Participants
The authors used a probability sample of children who attended prekindergarten in Georgia. To obtain a representative sample of classrooms and children, they used a fourstage sampling approach by (1) sampling counties stratified by the number of 4-year-olds; (2) sampling Georgia pre-K, Head Start, and private preschool sites within selected
counties; (3) sampling classes within sites; and (4) selecting children within classes. A total of 135 sites were selected, and 126 agreed to participate. Within selected and
participating classrooms, 75% of the families of children selected for the study gave consent for their children to participate. At the end of the preschool year, 482 children had
both fall and spring assessments.1 The average age of children in the sample was 4.5 years; 52% were boys; and 33% were African-American, 4% were Hispanic, and 58%
were white. The analysis sample included 120 children in 18 Creative Curriculum classrooms and 362 children in 51 control classrooms.
Setting
This study took place in a total of 69 full-day state preschool, Head Start, and private preschool classrooms in 69 centers or schools across Georgia.
Intervention
The Creative Curriculum is a comprehensive preschool curriculum for children ages 35. The curriculum addresses four areas of development: social/emotional, physical,
cognitive, and language. The Creative Curriculum requires the physical space of the classroom to be structured into 10 interest areas (blocks, dramatic play, toys and games,
art, library, discovery, sand and water, music and movement, cooking, and computers). Curriculum content includes literacy, mathematics, science, social studies, the arts,
technology, and skills such as observing, exploring, and problem solving. Teachers conduct ongoing child assessments employing a Developmental Checklist. Fidelity to the
curriculum was not measured in this study.
Comparison
Classrooms using High/Scope, High Reach, and a variety of other curricula were used as the comparison group. Fidelity to either The Creative Curriculum or the other
curricula was not measured in this study.
Primary outcomes
and measurement
The outcome domains assessed at the end of preschool were childrens oral language, print knowledge, and math. Oral language was assessed with the Peabody Picture
Vocabulary TestIII (PPVT-III) and the Oral and Written Language Scale (OWLS) Oral Expression subtest. Print knowledge was assessed with the Woodcock-JohnsonIII
(WJ-III) Letter-Word Identification subtest. Math was assessed with the WJ-III Applied Problems subtest. For a more detailed description of these outcome measures, see
Appendices A2.1A2.4.
Staff/teacher training
Teachers were already using particular curricula when the study began, so they had already been trained to use them. The study provides no information on the amount of
training or technical assistance teachers received in implementing particular curricula.
1. This sample size was obtained through an author query and includes children from the Georgia prekindergarten program, Head Start, and private preschools (for a discussion of this sample see
Henry et al., 2003). This sample differs from that included in Henry et al. (2004), which focused solely on children from the Georgia prekindergarten program (sample size of 326 children).
August 2009
11
Description
A standardized measure of childrens receptive vocabulary in which children show understanding of a spoken word by pointing to a picture that best represents the meaning
(as cited in PCER Consortium, 2008, and Henry et al., 2004).
A standardized measure of childrens ability to comprehend the meaning of sentences by selecting pictures that most accurately represent the sentence (as cited in PCER
Consortium, 2008).
A standardized measure of childrens expressive language that requires the child to answer questions and finish sentences (as cited in Henry et al., 2004).
Description
A standardized measure of childrens developing reading skills with three subtests: Alphabet, Conventions, and Meaning (as cited in PCER Consortium, 2008).1
A standardized measure that assesses childrens prewriting skills, such as drawing lines, tracing, and writing letters (as cited in PCER Consortium, 2008).
1. By name, this measure sounds as if it should be captured under the early reading and writing domain; however, the description of the measure identifies constructs that are pertinent to print
knowledge, such as knowing the alphabet, understanding print conventions, and environmental print.
Description
Preschool Comprehensive
Test of Phonological and Print
Processing (Pre-CTOPPP),
Elision subtest
A measure of childrens ability to identify and manipulate sounds in spoken words, using word prompts and picture plates for the first nine items and word prompts only for
later items (as cited in PCER Consortium, 2008).
August 2009
12
Description
Woodcock-JohnsonIII (WJ-III)
Applied Problems subtest
A standardized measure of childrens ability to solve numerical and spatial problems, presented verbally with accompanying pictures of objects (as cited in PCER Consortium,
2008, and Henry et al., 2004).
The average of four subscales: (1) solving addition and subtraction problems using visible objects, (2) constructing a set of objects equal in number to a given set,
(3) recognizing shapes, and (4) copying a pattern using objects that vary in color and identity from the model pattern (as cited in PCER Consortium, 2008).
Modified for PCER from the Building Blocks assessment tools. Children use blocks to fill in a puzzle and are assessed on whether they fill the puzzle without gaps or hangovers
(as cited in PCER Consortium, 2008).
August 2009
13
Appendix A3.1 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the oral language domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Outcome measure
Study
sample
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
WWC calculations
Comparison
group4
Mean
difference5
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size6
Statistical
significance7
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index8
Preschoolers
18/165
86.64
(14.43)
85.42
(13.40)
1.22
0.08
ns
+3
TOLD-P:3 Grammatic
Understanding subtest
Preschoolers
18/169
7.70
(2.58)
8.44
(2.68)
0.74
0.16
ns
0.04
na
20089
PPVT-III
Preschoolers
14/192
98.06
(13.27)
93.93
(15.37)
4.13
0.23
ns
+9
TOLD-P:3 Grammatic
Understanding subtest
Preschoolers
14/193
9.44
(2.55)
9.11
(2.73)
0.33
0.07
ns
+3
0.15
na
+6
20049
PPVT-III
Preschoolers
69/482
97.67
(14.17)
95.95
(13.78)
1.72
0.12
ns
+5
Preschoolers
69/482
94.11
(13.96)
92.83
(13.57)
1.28
0.09
ns
+4
0.11
na
+4
0.07
na
+3
(continued)
WWC Intervention Report
August 2009
14
Appendix A3.1 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the oral language domain1 (continued)
3.
4.
5.
6.
In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
In Henry et al. (2004), the comparison group mean equals the mean across all three alternative curriculum groups (High/Scope, High Reach, and others).
Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the authors (Cohens d based on a
repeated measures analysis).
7. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
8. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
9. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools and for multiple comparisons. For an explanation about the
clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate the statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix C for clustering and WWC Procedures and
Standards Handbook, Appendix D for multiple comparisons. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
In the case of Henry et al. (2004), the WWC corrected the mean comparisons for clustering.
10. The WWC-computed average effect sizes for each study and for the domain across studies are simple averages rounded to two decimal places. The average improvement indices are calculated from the average effect sizes.
August 2009
15
Appendix A3.2 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the print knowledge domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Study
sample
Outcome measure
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
WWC calculations
Comparison
group4
Mean
difference5
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size6
Statistical
significance7
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index8
Preschoolers
18/170
85.81
(13.97)
86.39
(13.88)
0.58
0.08
ns
WJ-III Letter-Word
Identification subtest
Preschoolers
18/169
99.87
(12.11)
101.74
(13.08)
1.87
0.08
ns
Preschoolers
18/169
87.39
(14.38)
91.95
(13.23)
4.56
0.18
ns
0.11
na
-4
Domain average for print knowledge (PCER Consortium [Chapter 3], 2008)10
PCER Consortium [Chapter 2],
20089
TERA-3
Preschoolers
14/193
88.12
(12.06)
87.98
(14.71)
0.14
0.02
ns
+1
WJ-III Letter-Word
Identification subtest
Preschoolers
14/193
100.80
(11.06)
97.21
(13.03)
3.59
0.16
ns
+6
Preschoolers
14/193
95.39
(11.07)
90.94
(12.98)
4.45
0.19
ns
+8
0.12
na
+5
0.19
ns
+7
0.19
na
+7
0.07
na
+3
Domain average for print knowledge (PCER Consortium [Chapter 2], 2008)10
Henry, Ponder, Rickman, Mashburn, Henderson, and Gordon,
WJ-III Letter-Word
Identification subtest
Preschoolers
69/482
studies10
104.95
(14.25)
102.46
(12.85)
20049
2.49
(continued)
WWC Intervention Report
August 2009
16
Appendix A3.2 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the print knowledge domain1 (continued)
1. This appendix reports findings considered for the effectiveness rating and the average improvement indices for the print knowledge domain. Kindergarten follow-up findings from PCER Consortium (2008) are not included in these
ratings but are reported in Appendix A4.2.
2. The standard deviation across all students in each group shows how dispersed the participants outcomes are: a smaller standard deviation on a given measure would indicate that participants had more similar outcomes.
3. In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
4. In Henry et al. (2004), the comparison group mean equals the mean across all three alternative curriculum groups (High/Scope, High Reach, and others).
5. Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
6. For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the authors (Cohens d based on a
repeated measures analysis).
7. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
8. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
9. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools and for multiple comparisons. For an explanation about the
clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate the statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix C for clustering and WWC Procedures and
Standards Handbook, Appendix D for multiple comparisons. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
In the case of Henry et al. (2004), the WWC corrected the mean comparisons for clustering.
10. The WWC-computed average effect sizes for each study and for the domain across studies are simple averages rounded to two decimal places. The average improvement indices are calculated from the average effect sizes.
11. This row provides the study average, which, in this instance, is also the domain average. The WWC-computed domain average effect size is a simple average rounded to two decimal places. The domain improvement index is calculated
from the average effect size.
August 2009
17
Appendix A3.3 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the phonological processing domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Outcome measure
Study
sample
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
Comparison
group
WWC calculations
Mean
difference4
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size5
Statistical
significance6
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index7
0.19
0.02
ns
+1
0.02
na
+1
0.10
ns
0.10
na
0.04
na
Preschoolers
18/171
8.38
(4.08)
8.19
(4.03)
Domain average for phonological processing (PCER Consortium [Chapter 3], 2008)8
PCER Consortium [Chapter 2], 20089
Pre-CTOPPP Elision subtest
Preschoolers
14/193
10.34
(3.60)
Domain average for phonological processing (PCER Consortium [Chapter 2], 2008)
8
10.38
(4.78)
0.04
August 2009
18
Appendix A3.4 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the math domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Study
sample
Outcome measure
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
WWC calculations
Comparison
group4
Mean
difference5
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size6
Statistical
significance7
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index8
Preschoolers
18/169
94.07
(12.26)
89.45
(13.75)
4.62
0.20
ns
+8
CMA-A composite
Preschoolers
18/170
0.42
(0.27)
0.44
(0.29)
0.02
0.10
ns
Shape Composition
Preschoolers
18/169
1.42
(0.89)
1.25
(0.83)
0.17
0.19
ns
+8
0.10
na
+4
20089
WJ-III Applied
Problems subtest
Preschoolers
14/193
100.45
(12.03)
96.48
(16.69)
3.97
0.17
ns
+7
CMA-A Composite
Preschoolers
14/193
0.55
(0.23)
0.53
(0.27)
0.02
0.10
ns
+4
Shape Composition
Preschoolers
14/193
1.74
(0.95)
1.85
(0.91)
0.11
0.12
ns
0.05
na
+2
0.19
ns
+8
0.19
na
+8
0.11
na
+4
Preschoolers
69/482
studies10
99.48
(14.73)
96.94
(12.68)
2.54
(continued)
WWC Intervention Report
August 2009
19
Appendix A3.4 Summary of study findings included in the rating for the math domain1 (continued)
1. This appendix reports findings considered for the effectiveness rating and the average improvement indices for the math domain. Kindergarten follow-up findings from PCER Consortium (2008) are not included in these ratings but are
reported in Appendix A4.4.
2. The standard deviation across all students in each group shows how dispersed the participants outcomes are: a smaller standard deviation on a given measure would indicate that participants had more similar outcomes.
3. In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
4. In Henry et al. (2004), the comparison group mean equals the mean across all three alternative curriculum groups (High/Scope, High Reach, and others).
5. Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
6. For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the study authors (Cohens d based on a
repeated measures analysis).
7. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
8. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
9. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools and for multiple comparisons. For an explanation about the
clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate the statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix C for clustering and WWC Procedures and
Standards Handbook, Appendix D for multiple comparisons. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
In the case of Henry et al. (2004), the WWC corrected the mean comparisons for clustering.
10. The WWC-computed average effect sizes for each study and for the domain across studies are simple averages rounded to two decimal places. The average improvement indices are calculated from the average effect sizes.
11. This row provides the study average, which, in this instance, is also the domain average. The WWC-computed domain average effect size is a simple average rounded to two decimal places. The domain improvement index is calculated
from the average effect size.
August 2009
20
Appendix A4.1 Summary of follow-up findings for the oral language domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Outcome measure
Study
sample
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum3
group
Comparison
group
WWC calculations
Mean
difference4
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size5
Statistical
significance6
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index7
Kindergarten
nr/199
99.29
(10.82)
97.21
(13.74)
2.08
0.12
ns
+5
TOLD-P:3 Grammatic
Understanding subtest
Kindergarten
nr/199
10.45
(2.24)
9.91
(2.93)
0.54
0.11
ns
+4
Kindergarten
nr/160
90.44
(11.94)
88.09
(13.60)
2.35
0.15
ns
TOLD-P:3 Grammatic
Understanding subtest
Kindergarten
nr/161
8.81
(2.67)
9.63
(2.88)
0.82
0.17
ns
This appendix presents follow-up findings considered for measures that fall in the oral language domain. End-of-preschool scores were used for rating purposes and are presented in Appendix A3.1.
The standard deviation across all students in each group shows how dispersed the participants outcomes are: a smaller standard deviation on a given measure would indicate that participants had more similar outcomes.
In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the study authors (Cohens d based on a
repeated measures analysis).
6. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
7. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
8. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools (corrections for multiple comparisons were not done for findings
not included in the overall intervention rating). For an explanation about the clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and
Standards Handbook, Appendix C. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
August 2009
21
Appendix A4.2 Summary of follow-up findings for the print knowledge domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Outcome measure
Study
sample
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
Comparison
group
WWC calculations
Mean
difference4
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size5
Statistical
significance6
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index7
Kindergarten
nr/199
94.73
(15.33)
93.99
(17.75)
0.74
0.10
ns
+4
WJ-III Letter-Word
Identification subtest
Kindergarten
nr/200
112.35
(11.92)
103.96
(13.41)
8.39
0.38
ns
+15
Kindergarten
nr/200
106.55
(11.62)
100.57
(15.15)
5.98
0.25
ns
+10
Kindergarten
nr/161
92.21
(17.62)
92.51
(15.30)
0.30
0.04
ns
WJ-III Letter-Word
Identification subtest
Kindergarten
nr/161
105.21
(15.25)
105.28
(12.95)
0.07
0.00
ns
Kindergarten
nr/161
100.99
(17.90)
102.28
(16.25)
1.29
0.05
ns
This appendix presents follow-up findings for measures that fall in the print knowledge domain. End-of-preschool scores were used for rating purposes and are presented in Appendix A3.2.
The standard deviation across all students in each group shows how dispersed the participants outcomes are: a smaller standard deviation on a given measure would indicate that participants had more similar outcomes.
In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the study authors (Cohens d based on a
repeated measures analysis).
6. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
7. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
8. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools (corrections for multiple comparisons were not done for findings
not included in the overall intervention rating). For an explanation about the clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix C. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
August 2009
22
Appendix A4.3 Summary of follow-up findings for the phonological processing domain1
Authors findings from the study
Mean outcome
(standard deviation)2
Outcome measure
Study
sample
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
Comparison
group
WWC calculations
Mean
difference4
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size5
Statistical
significance6
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index7
0.20
0.06
ns
+2
0.17
0.06
ns
+2
Kindergarten
nr/199
4.50
(3.41)
4.30
(3.27)
Kindergarten
nr/161
2.68
(3.03)
2.51
(2.83)
This appendix presents follow-up findings for measures that fall in the phonological processing domain. End-of-preschool scores were used for rating purposes and are presented in Appendix A3.3.
The standard deviation across all students in each group shows how dispersed the participants outcomes are: a smaller standard deviation on a given measure would indicate that participants had more similar outcomes.
In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the study authors (Cohens d based on
ANCOVA).
6. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
7. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
8. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools (corrections for multiple comparisons were not done for findings
not included in the overall intervention rating). For an explanation about the clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and
Standards Handbook, Appendix C. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
August 2009
23
Study
sample
Outcome measure
Sample size
(classrooms/
children)
The Creative
Curriculum
group3
Comparison
group
WWC calculations
Mean
difference4
(The Creative
Curriculum
comparison)
Effect
size5
Statistical
significance6
(at = 0.05)
Improvement
index7
Kindergarten
nr/200
103.79
(9.60)
99.88
(16.18)
3.91
0.17
ns
+7
CMA-A Composite
Kindergarten
nr/199
0.70
(0.17)
0.69
(0.18)
0.01
0.05
ns
+2
Shape Composition
Kindergarten
nr/200
2.36
(0.70)
2.36
(0.89)
0.00
0.00
ns
Kindergarten
nr/161
95.58
(14.29)
93.46
(13.21)
2.12
0.09
ns
+4
CMA-A Composite
Kindergarten
nr/161
0.66
(0.18)
0.63
(0.20)
0.03
0.14
ns
+6
Shape Composition
Kindergarten
nr/161
2.05
(0.80)
2.05
(0.92)
0.00
0.01
ns
This appendix presents follow-up findings for measures that fall in the math domain. End-of-preschool scores were used for rating purposes and are presented in Appendix A3.4.
The standard deviation across all students in each group shows how dispersed the participants outcomes are: a smaller standard deviation on a given measure would indicate that participants had more similar outcomes.
In PCER Consortium (2008), the treatment group mean equals the unadjusted control group mean and the covariate-adjusted mean difference. Standard deviations are unadjusted.
Positive differences and effect sizes favor the intervention group; negative differences and effect sizes favor the comparison group. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the mean differences are covariate adjusted.
For an explanation of the effect size calculation, see WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix B. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), the WWC used the effect sizes reported by the study authors (Cohens d based on a
repeated measures analysis).
6. Statistical significance is the probability that the difference between groups is a result of chance rather than a real difference between the groups.
7. The improvement index represents the difference between the percentile rank of the average student in the intervention condition and that of the average student in the comparison condition. The improvement index can take on values
between 50 and +50, with positive numbers denoting favorable results for the intervention group.
8. The level of statistical significance was reported by the study authors or, when necessary, calculated by the WWC to correct for clustering within classrooms or schools (corrections for multiple comparisons were not done for findings
not included in the overall intervention rating). For an explanation about the clustering correction, see the WWC Tutorial on Mismatch. For the formulas the WWC used to calculate statistical significance, see WWC Procedures and
Standards Handbook, Appendix C. In the case of PCER Consortium (2008), no corrections were needed because the analysis corrected for clustering by using HLM and no impacts were statistically significant.
August 2009
24
Appendix A5.1 The Creative Curriculum rating for the oral language domain
The WWC rates an interventions effects in a given outcome domain as positive, potentially positive, mixed, no discernible effects, potentially negative, or negative.1
For the outcome domain of oral knowledge, the WWC rated The Creative Curriculum as having no discernible effects.
Rating received
No discernible effects: No affirmative evidence of effects.
Criterion 1: None of the studies shows a statistically significant or substantively important effect, either positive or negative.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively important
effect, either positive or negative.
Other ratings considered
Positive effects: Strong evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant positive effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant positive effect.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important negative effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively important
negative effect.
Potentially positive effects: Evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect and fewer or the same number of studies showing indeterminate
effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important negative effect. None of the studies showed a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect on oral language.
1. For rating purposes, the WWC considers the statistical significance of individual outcomes and the domain-level effect. The WWC also considers the size of the domain-level effect for ratings of
potentially positive or potentially negative effects. For a complete description, see the WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix E.
(continued)
WWC Intervention Report
August 2009
25
Appendix A5.1 The Creative Curriculum rating for the oral language domain (continued)
Mixed effects: Evidence of inconsistent effects as demonstrated through either of the following criteria.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, and at least one study showing a statistically significant
or substantively important negative effect, but no more such studies than the number showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect.
or
Criterion 2: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important effect, and more studies showing an indeterminate effect than showing
a statistically significant or substantively important effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive or negative effect.
Potentially negative effects: Evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important negative effect.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, or more studies showing statistically significant or substantively
important negative effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect. None of the three studies showed a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect on oral language.
Negative effects: Strong evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant negative effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant negative effect.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured oral language showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect.
August 2009
26
Appendix A5.2 The Creative Curriculum rating for the print knowledge domain
The WWC rates an interventions effects in a given outcome domain as positive, potentially positive, mixed, no discernible effects, potentially negative, or negative.1
For the outcome domain of print knowledge, the WWC rated The Creative Curriculum as having no discernible effects.
Rating received
No discernible effects: No affirmative evidence of effects.
Criterion 1: None of the studies shows a statistically significant or substantively important effect, either positive or negative.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important effect, either positive or negative.
Other ratings considered
Positive effects: Strong evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant positive effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant positive effect.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important negative effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important negative effect.
Potentially positive effects: Evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect and fewer or the same number of studies showing indeterminate
effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important negative effect. None of the studies showed a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect on print knowledge.
1. For rating purposes, the WWC considers the statistical significance of individual outcomes and the domain-level effect. The WWC also considers the size of the domain-level effect for ratings of
potentially positive or potentially negative effects. For a complete description, see the WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix E.
(continued)
WWC Intervention Report
August 2009
27
Appendix A5.2 The Creative Curriculum rating for the print knowledge domain (continued)
Mixed effects: Evidence of inconsistent effects as demonstrated through either of the following criteria.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, and at least one study showing a statistically significant
or substantively important negative effect, but no more such studies than the number showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect.
or
Criterion 2: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important effect, and more studies showing an indeterminate effect than showing
a statistically significant or substantively important effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive or negative effect.
Potentially negative effects: Evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important negative effect.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, or more studies showing statistically significant or substantively
important negative effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect. None of the studies showed a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect on print knowledge.
Negative effects: Strong evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant negative effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant negative effect.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured print knowledge showed a statistically significant or substantively
important positive effect.
August 2009
28
Appendix A5.3 The Creative Curriculum rating for the phonological processing domain
The WWC rates an interventions effects in a given outcome domain as positive, potentially positive, mixed, no discernible effects, potentially negative, or negative.1
For the outcome domain of phonological processing, the WWC rated The Creative Curriculum as having no discernible effects.
Rating received
No discernible effects: No affirmative evidence of effects.
Criterion 1: None of the studies shows a statistically significant or substantively important effect, either positive or negative.
Met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or substantively important effect, either positive or negative. No other studies measured phonological processing.
Other ratings considered
Positive effects: Strong evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant positive effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant positive
effect. No other studies measured phonololgical processing.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important negative effects.
Met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect. No other studies measured phonololgical processing.
Potentially positive effects: Evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or
substantively important positive effect. No other studies measured phonololgical processing.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect and fewer or the same number of studies showing indeterminate
effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or
substantively important negative effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
1. For rating purposes, the WWC considers the statistical significance of individual outcomes and the domain-level effect. The WWC also considers the size of the domain-level effect for ratings of
potentially positive or potentially negative effects. For a complete description, see the WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix E.
(continued)
WWC Intervention Report
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Appendix A5.3 The Creative Curriculum rating for the phonological processing domain (continued)
Mixed effects: Evidence of inconsistent effects as demonstrated through either of the following criteria.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, and at least one study showing a statistically significant
or substantively important negative effect, but no more such studies than the number showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or
substantively important positive or negative effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
or
Criterion 2: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important effect, and more studies showing an indeterminate effect than showing
a statistically significant or substantively important effect.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or
substantively important positive or negative effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
Potentially negative effects: Evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or
substantively important negative effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, or more studies showing statistically significant or substantively
important negative effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
Negative effects: Strong evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant negative effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant negative
effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. Neither of the two studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured phonological processing showed a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect. No other studies measured phonological processing.
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Appendix A5.4 The Creative Curriculum rating for the math domain
The WWC rates an interventions effects in a given outcome domain as positive, potentially positive, mixed, no discernible effects, potentially negative, or negative.1
For the outcome domain of math, the WWC rated The Creative Curriculum as having no discernible effects.
Rating received
No discernible effects: No affirmative evidence of effects.
Criterion 1: None of the studies shows a statistically significant or substantively important effect, either positive or negative.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important effect,
either positive or negative.
Other ratings considered
Positive effects: Strong evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant positive effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant positive effect.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important negative effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed statistically significant or substantively important negative
effects.
Potentially positive effects: Evidence of a positive effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important
positive effect.
and
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect and fewer or the same number of studies showing indeterminate
effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important
negative effect.
1. For rating purposes, the WWC considers the statistical significance of individual outcomes and the domain-level effect. The WWC also considers the size of the domain-level effect for ratings of
potentially positive or potentially negative effects. For a complete description, see the WWC Procedures and Standards Handbook, Appendix E.
(continued)
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Appendix A5.4 The Creative Curriculum rating for the math domain (continued)
Mixed effects: Evidence of inconsistent effects as demonstrated through either of the following criteria.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, and at least one study showing a statistically significant
or substantively important negative effect, but no more such studies than the number showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important
positive or negative effect.
or
Criterion 2: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important effect, and more studies showing an indeterminate effect than showing
a statistically significant or substantively important effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important
positive or negative effect.
Potentially negative effects: Evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: At least one study showing a statistically significant or substantively important negative effect.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important
negative effect.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing a statistically significant or substantively important positive effect, or more studies showing statistically significant or substantively
important negative effects than showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important positive
effect.
Negative effects: Strong evidence of a negative effect with no overriding contrary evidence.
Criterion 1: Two or more studies showing statistically significant negative effects, at least one of which met WWC evidence standards for a strong design.
Not met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant negative effect.
AND
Criterion 2: No studies showing statistically significant or substantively important positive effects.
Met. None of the three studies of The Creative Curriculum that measured math showed a statistically significant or substantively important positive
effect.
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Schools
Students1
Extent of evidence2
Oral language
101
839
Medium to large
Print knowledge
101
844
Medium to large
Phonological processing
32
364
Medium to large
na
Cognition
na
Math
101
844
Medium to large
Outcome domain
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