
Yet Another Study Finds That Peer Tutoring Is Effective For Tutors & The Students Being Tutored
We’ve been using peer tutors for years at our school, and their impacts have been amazing.
Lots of previous research has found positive effects for bot tutors and the students they have been tutoring, and we’ve found that to be the case, too.
You can read more about that previous research, and our own local findings at:
The Best Resources On The Value & Practice Of Having Older Students Mentoring Younger Ones
THE BEST RESOURCES ON PEER TUTORS
Here’s the summary of the open access new study from Evidence In Brief:
A meta-analysis published in Educational Psychology Review by Chang and colleagues examined the effectiveness of cross-age tutoring in educational settings. Cross-age tutoring involves pairing an older tutor with a younger tutee at different developmental stages, with the expectation that both participants benefit. The meta-analysis analyzed 31 experimental studies (RCT or quasi-experimental design) involving 147 effect sizes of academic outcomes. Of these, 28 studies (117 effect sizes) examined the impact on tutees, while 14 studies (30 effect sizes) examined the impact on tutors. The tutors ranged from older students in grades 5 through 12 to adult tutors, including university students and community volunteers.
The researchers found that cross-age tutoring generated positive academic outcomes for both tutors and tutees, with an overall effect size of +0.34. Specifically, tutees showed significant academic improvement (ES=+0.33), while tutors also demonstrated considerable learning gains (ES=+0.39). Importantly, the analysis revealed that student tutors (ES = +0.37) were as effective as adult tutors (ES = +0.25) in improving tutees’ academic outcomes, and the intervention proved beneficial for both typically-developing students and those with learning difficulties. The positive effects were consistent across both reading and mathematics.
The findings suggest that using older students as tutors is not only feasible and cost-effective, but also academically beneficial for both tutors and tutees.
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