An Analysis of Content Elimination and Strategies Used by Elementary Classroom Teachers in the Curriculum Compacting Process

Curriculum compacting is an instructional strategy that can be used by classroom teachers to modify and/or eliminate curriculum material that has already been mastered, or can be mastered in a fraction of the time, by students of above average ability. In this experimental research study, the effects of three increasing levels of treatment on the instructional practices of elementary school teachers as they implemented curriculum compacting are reported. Approximately 470 teachers from 27 school districts across the country participated in this study sponsored by The National Research Center on the Gifted and Talented (NRC/GT). This article will report: the content areas in which various percentages of curriculum could be compacted; the strategies used by teachers to identify subject matter previously mastered by students; the assessment strategies utilized by teachers to document proficiency of curriculum material; and the nature and type of replacement strategies teachers used after curriculum was compacted. Results suggest that elementary teachers are able to eliminate between 24–70% of the curriculum across content areas for more capable students. It was also clear from the results that classroom teachers need considerable assistance to design challenging and rigorous replacement activities.