SBIR-STTR Award

Computer Adaptive Triarchic Assessment and Instructional Activities for Early Childhood
Award last edited on: 7/19/2019

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
DoEd
Total Award Amount
$950,000
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
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Principal Investigator
Jennifer Knestrick

Company Information

Children's Progress Inc

108 West 39th Street Suite 1300
New York City, NY 10018
   (866) 427-4787
   N/A
   www.childrensprogress.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 10
County: New York

Phase I

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: ----    Completed: ----
Phase I year
2010
Phase I Amount
$100,000
This project team developed a prototype of the software component of the Computer Adaptive Triarchic Assessment and Instructional Activities for Early Childhood. The software component will be used with Children's Progress core product to identify gifted prekindergarten to 2nd grade students. The software uses computer adaptive methods to determine young children's analytic, practical, and creative abilities. The product is intended to enhance the connection between assessment and instruction by generating online reports with individualized recommendations based on student profiles. Phase I research demonstrated that the prototype functioned as planned, that students were engaged by the prototype, and that teachers felt the product could eventually be integrated within their daily practices.

Phase II

Contract Number: ----------
Start Date: ----    Completed: ----
Phase II year
2011
Phase II Amount
$850,000
Purpose: Prior research has shown that students who are considered to be gifted generally have high levels of academic performance, motivation, creativity, critical thinking skills, and positive self-concepts. Perhaps because the general perception is that gifted students will flourish under any conditions, support for gifted children may be limited within some schools. The purpose of this project is to develop an early intervention software program to assess and provide support to gifted children in social and intellectual domains. Project Activities: In Phase I, the team developed a prototype assessment consisting of 96 items and demonstrated its technological feasibility with 400 general education students who had been pre-identified as gifted. In Phase II, the team will integrate student performance data in cognitive and academic domains to customize recommendations and provide targeted resources to teachers. To assess the implementation feasibility and technological usability of the technology, and to gather data on the promise of the product to identify gifted students and support learning, a series of pilot studies will be conducted with approximately 6,000 students from a current pool of 200,000 users of the company's existing core product. Half of the students will be randomly assigned to receive the intervention as a supplement to the curriculum whereas half will be in the business-as-usual group. Analyses will compare student performance on standardized assessments in literacy and mathematics. Product: The Computer Adaptive Triarchic Assessment and Instructional Activities for Early Childhood will be integrated within Children's Progress' core product, the Children's Progress Academic Assessment. The new software will identify gifted children in pre-kindergarten to 2nd grade through computer adaptive methods that measure children's ability profiles in analytic, practical, and creative domains. The software will enhance the connection between assessment and instruction by generating online reports with individualized recommendations based on these profiles.