This 1977 book reports on an experimental program that was designed to
discover whether a summer of intensive academic work and recreation on a
college campus could significantly improve the educational performance
of economically disadvantaged thirteen-year-old children. For three
successive summers, sixty-five experimental participants and sixty-five
control participants were selected randomly from schools in two large
cities and three small cities. Experimental and control pairs were
carefully matched. The results of this program were assessed in terms of
six indicators: persistence in school, junior high school grades, senior
high school grades, achievement test scores, assignment to a special
school track, and attendance at academic or other special schools. On
all six measures the performance of experimental pupils was judged
superior to that of their matched control partners. The results of
Middle Start indicate that even in the middle years of schooling,
inner-city children can be helped significantly by skilful educational
intervention.