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Rhymer, Katrina N.; Henington, Carlen; Skinner, Christopher H.; Looby, E. Joan – School Psychology Quarterly, 1999
Investigates and compares the effects of explicit timing on mathematics problem completion rates in African American (n=68) and Caucasian (n=18) second-grade students. Results show that both African American and Caucasian second grade students increased their problem completion rates. No significant cross-group differences were found. Discussion…
Descriptors: Blacks, Elementary Education, Grade 2, Mathematics Achievement
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Evans-Hampton, Tawny N.; Skinner, Christopher H.; Henington, Carlen; Sims, Sanpier; McDaniel, C. Elizabeth – School Psychology Review, 2002
Evaluates situational bias that could be associated with curriculum-based measurement (CBM). During CBM, students are timed while responding. Results showed that students' accuracy levels increased under the conspicuous timing conditions, but there was no interaction between timing condition and ethnicity for digits correct per minute, digits…
Descriptors: Curriculum Based Assessment, Ethnicity, Mathematics Tests, Test Bias
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Rhymer, Katrina N.; Dittmer, Karen I.; Skinner, Christopher H.; Jackson, Bertha – School Psychology Quarterly, 2000
An alternating treatments design was used to evaluate the effectiveness of an educational program that combined timings, peer tutoring, positive-practice overcorrection, and performance feedback on mathematics fluency in four elementary school students with mathematics skills deficits. Results are discussed in terms of combining intervention…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Error Correction, Feedback, Mathematics Skills
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Rhymer, Katrina N.; Skinner, Christopher H.; Henington, Carlen; D'Reaux, Robyn A.; Sims, SanPier – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1998
A study evaluated the effects of explicit timing procedure on problem completion rates and accuracy levels in 40 African-American third-grade students. Results showed that the explicit timing procedure increased problem completion rates. A decreasing trend in percentage of problems correct also occurred. Recommendations for educators are…
Descriptors: Black Students, Educational Strategies, Grade 3, Learning Disabilities