Abstract

This study examined the effects of previous training and experience in peer tutoring on the nature of student interactions. Sixteen classrooms were assigned randomly to two treatments: with and without previous training and experience in peer tutoring. Peer-tutoring teachers taught students a structured, interactional, explanatory verbal rehearsal routine that incorporated step-by-step feedback. Peer tutoring was implemented on a mathematics operations curriculum twice weekly for 10 weeks. Each teacher had identified an average achiever and a low achiever to serve, respectively, as the tutor and the tutee during peer-tutoring generalization sessions. Videotapes were analyzed at three levels: microlevel quantifications, global ratings, and transcripts of representative dyads. Across levels of analysis and across operations and applications content, experienced dyads provided explanations in a more interactional style that incorporated sounder instructional principles. As revealed in the transcripts, however, the nature of student explanations in both conditions was primarily algorithmic rather than conceptual.

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