Many college students never take, or do
not pass, required remedial mathematics courses theorized to increase
college-level
performance. Some colleges and states are therefore
instituting policies allowing students to take college-level courses
without
first taking remedial courses. However, no
experiments have compared the effectiveness of these approaches, and
other data
are mixed.
This study randomly assigned 907 students to (a)
remedial elementary algebra, (b) that course with workshops, or (c)
college-level
statistics with workshops (corequisite
remediation). Students assigned to statistics passed at a rate 16
percentage points
higher than those assigned to algebra (p <
.001), and subsequently accumulated more credits. A majority of enrolled
statistics
students passed. Policies allowing students to take
college-level instead of remedial quantitative courses can increase
student
success.
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