What Happens When Schools Stop Using ST Math? (2024)

At MIND, we take great pride in our accountability with continuous research. As a result, we can share how effective ST Math is—and how critical it is to student math achievement—by demonstrating repeatable results at scale. But despite the proven success of ST Math, districts and schools may decide to stop using it.

There is no denying the significant improvement in grade-level performance when schools and districts implement ST Math in classrooms. The question is, would math scores drop when students stop using ST Math?

The answer: a resounding YES. (see chart below)

What Happens When Schools Stop Using ST Math? (1)

526 schools in 19 states* and the District of Columbia (grades 3, 4, and 5) used ST Math at least one year from 2005/06 through 2017/18. All stopped using before 2019/20 (missing data due to the Covid-19 pandemic)

Districts rarely remove a digital math component without replacing it with a competitor product. Any product adds its own average effect size—its own scale score points—to student scores, depending on use. So when ST Math is dropped, the scale score points it has been providing need to be replaced by what the new product delivers. The results of our studies covering 324 schools show that the replacement competitor math products cannot match ST Math’s effects, and school performance drops right back to the “average competitor” level.

When you compare the "Baseline Year" (before ST Math) to the "Treatment Year" (using ST Math), the installment of ST Math was associated with an increase of 6.14% in percentile ranking. But when you look at the change from the "Treatment Year" to the "Post Year" (no longer using ST Math), these same school-grades averaged a decrease of 7.43% in percentile ranking with ST Math's replacement. Both results were statistically significant.

These findings present a strong case for ST Math's efficacy and demonstrate by its absence how it is outperforming other competitor replacement products in standardized test math performance.

Many innovations were necessary to enable this sort of analysis of "what happens after." Every year, MIND collects publicly available math standardized testing data at the school-grade level and analyzes all new cohorts of ST Math users. These state math scores are normalized using z-scores and converted into normalized percentile rankings. This allows comparisons across years, exams, and states.

Unlike previous studies, this goes one step further in showing what happens after ST Math is no longer used. These findings from “before” to “after” not only show the positive effect of using ST Math on student math achievement but also signal a warning that math gains drop if students stop playing ST Math.

Taken together, MIND has run hundreds of studies, analyzing school-grades 3-5 using ST Math with fidelity (at least 85% student enrollment and at least 40% grade-mean progress completed by April 15) compared to a matched comparison group (having never used ST Math) via a quasi-experimental design (QED). Put simply, we compared differences in math scores before and after the implementation of ST Math.

Similar to this study, the comparison group can be assumed to have some other product that ST Math must outperform to show a positive effect—which it does, whether upon being installed or subsequent to being dropped.

Unlike previous studies, which show the boost from ST Math upon adoption and use, this goes one step further in showing what happens when ST Math is no longer used. These findings not only show the positive effect of ST Math on student math achievement but also signal a warning that math gains will drop if students stop playing ST Math.

All edtech products claim effectiveness, and it’s reasonable to assume that they add value to some degree when compared to “nothing.” The efficacy underlying every instructional program has some positive impact on student learning outcomes. Yes, it should come as no surprise that all edtech programs work.

The truth is that "evidence" can be generated and provided by any program. But we should be asking even more questions other than whether an edtech product is effective. Evaluating an instructional program requires a more comprehensive and nuanced lens—one we're more than willing to provide, especially when determining ST Math's efficacy.

With all this in mind, the underlying question remains: can most edtech programs achieve the same, better, or worse results than ST Math at scale?

The results of this study clearly show the relative effectiveness of ST Math. More importantly, it shows what will happen when students stop using ST Math.

Districts and schools need to realize the risk they are taking when replacing ST Math with another edtech product. When the mathematical achievement of all students is at stake, this is not a risk worth taking.

To learn more about why students who use ST Math see higher state scores, visit the link below.

What Happens When Schools Stop Using ST Math? (2)

*Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Iowa, Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Maryland, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Nevada, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, and Washington

What Happens When Schools Stop Using ST Math? (2024)

FAQs

Does ST math actually help? ›

ST Math is an excellent tool for schools and districts looking to supercharge their math instruction, and is an ideal fit under the requirements for ESSER III funds.

What percent does ST math stop at? ›

What happens when a student gets to 100%? They keep going! When a student completes all the puzzles in a grade level, they are started back at the beginning of their current grade level Journey so they always have something to play.

What happens when you finish St math? ›

Students will automatically begin the Bonus Journey once they complete the grade-level journey. This provides even more great ST Math games which are added to the student's puzzle count. Bonus Journey games can be assigned to individual students or to the entire class at anytime during the school year.

Why do schools use ST math? ›

ST Math starts by teaching the foundational concepts visually, then connects the ideas to the symbols and language. With visual learning, students are better equipped to tackle unfamiliar math problems, recognize patterns, and build conceptual understanding.

How do I quit St math? ›

If you would like to cancel your subscription, call our support center for assistance at 888-751-5443 or email homeschool@stmath.com.

What is the hardest math in school? ›

Differential equations, real analysis, and complex analysis are some of the most challenging mathematics courses that are offered at the high school level. These courses are typically taken by students who are interested in pursuing careers in mathematics, physics, or engineering.

What happens when you reach 100% on st math? ›

ST Math is mastery based, which means students must pass each level with a score of 100% (all puzzles correctly solved) before the next level in a sequence becomes available to them. Each student has their own personalized journey and takes as long as they need to achieve mastery.

What to do if ST math is not working? ›

ST Math Support

Call us at (888) 491-6603 weekdays from 5 am to 5 pm Pacific, or by email at support@mindeducation.org.

How long should students be on ST math? ›

ST Math is a flexible instructional tool that can fit easily into many different curriculum implementations. In a computer lab, during designated classroom time, station-rotation, or at home - as long as students are using ST Math for 60-90 minutes per week, you will see gains in their math achievement.

Can you skip math 1 in high school? ›

Under California Education Code (EC) Section 56101, the governing board of a district or county office of education or a Special Education Local Plan Area may request the State Board of Education (SBE) to grant a waiver for individual students from all or part of the Algebra I/Mathematics I graduation requirement .

Is St math popular? ›

Over 2.1 million students, 110,000+ teachers, and 7,000+ schools in all 50 states across the country are currently using ST Math, which has proven its impact on test scores and students' attitudes toward mathematics.

Should I skip a year of math? ›

Skipping a year of math before pursuing a bachelor's degree or associate degree can be problematic. Math skills become rusty; students may fall behind their peers in majors that require quantitative knowledge, whether biology, statistics or business.

What are the pros and cons of St math? ›

Pros: Interactive games with minimal reading make activities accessible to a range of learners. Cons: Some visuals might be too childish for older students. Bottom Line: Great tool for differentiating in-class and at-home math practice.

How long has ST math been out? ›

ST Math is a product of the nonprofit MIND Research Institute that's been working in neuroscience and education research for over 20 years. ST Math is a PreK-8 visual instructional program that leverages the brain's innate spatial-temporal* reasoning ability to solve mathematical problems.

What gender is JiJi from ST math? ›

JiJi FAQs. Is JiJi male or female? JiJi does not have a specific gender so students can assign attributes to JiJi that make sense to them and will support them in their mathematical journey with JiJi.

What happens when you reach 100 in st math? ›

ST Math is mastery based, which means students must pass each level with a score of 100% (all puzzles correctly solved) before the next level in a sequence becomes available to them. Each student has their own personalized journey and takes as long as they need to achieve mastery.

Do math games actually help? ›

Students often don't realize they're learning when they play math games. Whether played at home or in the classroom, math games provide engaging practice opportunities that can improve your students' fluency and number sense and help create an interactive and engaging learning environment.

Does math actually help you? ›

Practicing math has been shown to improve investigative skills, resourcefulness and creativity. This is because math problems often require us to bend our thinking and approach problems in more than one way. The first process we try might not work.

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