A catch-up programme for four- and five-year-olds could be “crucial” to closing the disadvantage gap that will “inevitably widen” while schools are closed, new research suggests.
Theprogramme, designed to improve children’s language skills,hasbeen found to boost pupils’ progressby three additional months, according to the Education Endowment Foundation (EEF).
Professor Becky Francis, the EEF’s chief executive officer,said the sessions could be a “particularly effective” way of helping children to catch up after the school shutdown.
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Background:Class divide in online learning
The Nuffield Early Language Intervention (NELI), designed to improve the language skills of four- and five-year-olds who are falling behind, was trialled by 93 schools across England and evaluated by a team of independent researchers fromthe EEF.
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Teaching assistants were given two and a halfdays of training and detailed lesson plans so they could lead “short, structured sessions”, often around everyday topicssuch as “time” and “what we wear”, with small groups of Reception pupils.
Rewarding the children was an “integral feature” of each session, and ranged from “targeted verbal praise” to more formal incentives such asa “best listener award”.
The researchers concluded that children who received the NELI programme made the equivalent of three additional months’ progress in language skills, on average, compared withchildren who did not receive it.
Josh Hillman, director of education at the Nuffield Foundation, which produced the programme, said: “When children go back to the classroom later this year, effective, school-based interventions like NELI will be crucial to closing the ‘disadvantage gap’, which will inevitably widen whileschools and nurseries are closed during the Covid-19 crisis.”
Professor Francis added: “School closures are likely to mean those children and young people who were already strugglingfall further behind.
“While schools are working hard to mitigate against this, in the long-termwe need to focus on how best to help pupils bounce back when schools open again.
“Catch-up teaching targeted especially at those who have fallen furthest behind during this period will be essential.
“This is why today’s findings are so important. It is always welcome to find good evidence that a particular programme or approach is likely to boost outcomes, but today’s result suggests that this programme could be a particularly effective way of helping young children whose language skills have been particularly affected by school closures to catch up when they reopen.”