Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?

Recent evidence points to the early elementary grades as a pivotal point for the development of science learning trajectories and achievement gaps. Using data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, this study estimates the degree to which time spent on science and the breadth of science topics...

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Main Authors: F. Chris Curran, James Kitchin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2019-07-01
Series:AERA Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419861081
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spelling doaj-eaf31c8f949a4130aac23219f3c94f022020-11-25T03:24:36ZengSAGE PublishingAERA Open2332-85842019-07-01510.1177/2332858419861081Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?F. Chris CurranJames KitchinRecent evidence points to the early elementary grades as a pivotal point for the development of science learning trajectories and achievement gaps. Using data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, this study estimates the degree to which time spent on science and the breadth of science topics/skills covered predict science achievement in the earliest grades of elementary school. Using regression along with school fixed effects and student fixed effects models, we find suggestive evidence in some models (student fixed effects and regression with observable controls) that time on science instruction is related to science achievement but little evidence that the number of science topics/skills covered are related to greater science achievement. These results are generally consistent across student subgroups. We discuss the implications for early science policy and practice.https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419861081
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. Chris Curran
James Kitchin
spellingShingle F. Chris Curran
James Kitchin
Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?
AERA Open
author_facet F. Chris Curran
James Kitchin
author_sort F. Chris Curran
title Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?
title_short Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?
title_full Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?
title_fullStr Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?
title_full_unstemmed Early Elementary Science Instruction: Does More Time on Science or Science Topics/Skills Predict Science Achievement in the Early Grades?
title_sort early elementary science instruction: does more time on science or science topics/skills predict science achievement in the early grades?
publisher SAGE Publishing
series AERA Open
issn 2332-8584
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Recent evidence points to the early elementary grades as a pivotal point for the development of science learning trajectories and achievement gaps. Using data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, this study estimates the degree to which time spent on science and the breadth of science topics/skills covered predict science achievement in the earliest grades of elementary school. Using regression along with school fixed effects and student fixed effects models, we find suggestive evidence in some models (student fixed effects and regression with observable controls) that time on science instruction is related to science achievement but little evidence that the number of science topics/skills covered are related to greater science achievement. These results are generally consistent across student subgroups. We discuss the implications for early science policy and practice.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2332858419861081
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