The effects of a collaborative peer tutor teaching program on the self
-concept and school-based attitudes of seventh-grade students at a lar
ge urban junior high school were explored. Many of the students in the
sample had been previously identified to be at risk by traditional sc
hool identification strategies. The study consisted of the 282 subject
s enrolled in the seventh grade at F.C. Hammond Junior High School in
Alexandria, Virginia. The Piers-Harris Self-Concept Scale was used to
measure self-concept in subjects. The Demos D (Dropout) Scale was used
to measure student tendency to drop out of school. Data were collecte
d at two points during the 16-week period (immediately before program
onset and immediately after program completion. A post hoc analysis re
vealed that students in the collaborative peer tutor teaching program
demonstrated significant improvement in dropout scores compared with s
tudents in both the traditional class using group learning activities
and the traditional class using individual learning activities. There
were no significant differences between the traditional class groups.
The results of this study indicate that a collaborative peer tutor tea
ching program can be effective in eliciting improvements in self-conce
pt and attitudes toward school in seventh-grade urban students.