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Dive into the research topics where Steven Holtzman is active.

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Featured researches published by Steven Holtzman.


Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness | 2011

Relative Effectiveness of Reading Intervention Programs for Adults with Low Literacy.

John Sabatini; Jane Shore; Steven Holtzman; Hollis S. Scarborough

Abstract To compare the efficacy of instructional programs for adult learners with basic reading skills below the 7th-grade level, 300 adults were randomly assigned to 1 of 3 supplementary tutoring programs designed to strengthen decoding and fluency skills, and gains were examined for the 148 adult students who completed the program. The 3 intervention programs were based on or adapted from instructional programs that have been shown to benefit children with reading levels similar to those of the adult sample. Each program varied in its relative emphasis on basic decoding versus reading fluency instruction. A repeated measures multivariate analysis of variance confirmed small to moderate reading gains from pre- to posttesting across a battery of targeted reading measures but no significant relative differences across interventions. An additional 152 participants who failed to complete the intervention differed initially from those who persisted. Implications for future research and adult literacy instruction are discussed.


Applied Psychology: Health and Well-being | 2012

Emotional Intelligence Relates to Well‐Being: Evidence from the Situational Judgment Test of Emotional Management

Jeremy Burrus; Anthony Betancourt; Steven Holtzman; Jennifer Minsky; Carolyn MacCann; Richard D. Roberts

BACKGROUND This research was conducted to examine whether people high in emotional intelligence (EI) have greater well-being than people low in EI. METHOD The Situational Test of Emotion Management, Scales of Psychological Well-being, and Day Reconstruction Method were completed by 131 college students. RESULTS Responses to the Situational Test of Emotion Management were strongly related to eudaimonic well-being as measured by responses on the Scales of Psychological Well-being (r=.54). Furthermore, the ability to manage emotions was related to hedonic well-being, correlating with both the frequency of experienced positive affect and the frequency of experienced negative affect, as measured by the Day Reconstruction Method. CONCLUSION Two aspects of these results suggest a relationship between EI and well-being. First, the observed relationship between ability EI and psychological well-being is the largest reported in the literature to date. Second, this study is the first use of the Day Reconstruction Method to examine the relationship between well-being and EI. Results are discussed in terms of the potential for training emotion management to enhance well-being. Methodological advances for future research are also suggested.


Reading Psychology | 2013

Changes in Reading Practices and Perceptions in Low-Literacy-Level Adult Learners

Jane Shore; John Sabatini; Jennifer Lentini; Steven Holtzman

This article reports on pre to post changes found in learners who participated in the Relative Effectiveness of Adult Literacy (REAL) reading interventions study (n = 81). Changes reported cover the types of texts learners read, the frequency of self-reported reading, perceptions of how well they read the texts, and their perceptions of how skilled they were at various reading-related tasks. Relationships among the changes in habits and perceptions and reading achievement are explored. For 36 of the 81, a six-month follow up interview was conducted.


International Journal of Science Education | 2017

Understanding Science Teaching Effectiveness: Examining How Science-Specific and Generic Instructional Practices Relate to Student Achievement in Secondary Science Classrooms.

Jamie N. Mikeska; Tamara Shattuck; Steven Holtzman; Daniel F. McCaffrey; Nancy Duchesneau; Yi Qi; Leslie Stickler

ABSTRACT In order to create conditions for students’ meaningful and rigorous intellectual engagement in science classrooms, it is critically important to help science teachers learn which strategies and approaches can be used best to develop students’ scientific literacy. Better understanding how science teachers’ instructional practices relate to student achievement can provide teachers with beneficial information about how to best engage their students in meaningful science learning. To address this need, this study examined the instructional practices that 99 secondary biology teachers used in their classrooms and employed regression to determine which instructional practices are predictive of students’ science achievement. Results revealed that the secondary science teachers who had well-managed classroom environments and who provided opportunities for their students to engage in student-directed investigation-related experiences were more likely to have increased student outcomes, as determined by teachers’ value-added measures. These findings suggest that attending to both generic and subject-specific aspects of science teachers’ instructional practice is important for understanding the underlying mechanisms that result in more effective science instruction in secondary classrooms. Implications about the use of these observational measures within teacher evaluation systems are discussed.


Applied Measurement in Education | 2017

A Multilevel Factor Analysis of Third-Party Evaluations of Noncognitive Constructs Used in Admissions Decision Making

Maria Elena Oliveri; Daniel F. McCaffrey; Chelsea Ezzo; Steven Holtzman

ABSTRACT The assessment of noncognitive traits is challenging due to possible response biases, “subjectivity” and “faking.” Standardized third-party evaluations where an external evaluator rates an applicant on their strengths and weaknesses on various noncognitive traits are a promising alternative. However, accurate score-based inferences from third-party evaluations requires disentangling score variance due to raters versus applicants by utilizing a multilevel factor analysis (MFA). To date, MFA is highly underutilized in the measurement field. In this study, we apply the MFA to analyze third-party evaluations using data from the Personal Potential Index (PPI). The PPI is a third-party measure used to evaluate graduate school applicants noncognitive traits to help inform admissions decisions. We analyzed 12,693 ratings of 6,249 applicants divided into two randomly selected subgroups. We conducted multilevel exploratory factor analysis with one subgroup and tested the hypothesized structure with the other subgroup. This work illustrates the advantages and challenges of using MFA approach to support the meaningful and valid interpretation of scores from third-party evaluations.


Reading Psychology | 2015

Development of an Evidence-Based Reading Fluency Program for Adult Literacy Learners

Jane Shore; John Sabatini; Jennifer Lentini; Steven Holtzman; Adjua McNeil

Fluency is an essential part of skilled reading that has only recently begun to receive its deserved attention. However, programs that meaningfully engage adult learners in fluency training have not been widely explored in research. In this article, the authors describe an evidence-based adult Guided Repeated Reading program developed for low-literate adult learners (reading at the seventh-grade equivalent or below). Lessons incorporated teacher-guided, choral, paired, and other repeated readings of these texts, supplemented by lessons that build on prior knowledge, embedded phonics and vocabulary, comprehension, and reading strategy support. The program has been implemented in a national efficacy study of reading in adults. Outcomes and future implications of the implementation are discussed.


Improving Schools | 2017

Teaching High School Students to Manage Time: The Development of an Intervention.

Jeremy Burrus; Teresa Jackson; Steven Holtzman; Richard D. Roberts

This article reports the results of a quasi-experimental study conducted to examine the efficacy of a new time management intervention designed for high school students. Participants were 149 students from a highly selective private high school in the northeastern United States who were in the ninth grade. Half of the students participated in a 5-week intervention, which involved an assessment of time management, feedback, and action plans, and 5 weekly homework assignments. After the intervention, academic advisors who were blind to condition rated student time management behaviors. Ratings were higher for the treatment group than for the control group. This difference reached significance for students who began the intervention low in time management skills. Implications and suggestions for improving the intervention are discussed.


ETS Research Report Series | 2014

New Perspectives on the Validity of the GRE® General Test for Predicting Graduate School Grades

David M. Klieger; Frederick Cline; Steven Holtzman; Jennifer Minsky; Florian Lorenz


Journal of Educational Computing Research | 2014

From Teacher Professional Development to the Classroom: How NLP Technology Can Enhance Teachers' Linguistic Awareness to Support Curriculum Development for English Language Learners

Jill Burstein; Jane Shore; John Sabatini; Brad Moulder; Jennifer Lentini; Kietha Biggers; Steven Holtzman


ETS Research Report Series | 2012

THE LANGUAGE MUSESM SYSTEM: LINGUISTICALLY FOCUSED INSTRUCTIONAL AUTHORING

Jill Burstein; Jane Shore; John Sabatini; Brad Moulder; Steven Holtzman; Ted Pedersen

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