
Using a System of Least Prompts Procedure to Teach Telephone Skills to Elementary Students with Cognitive Disabilities
Manley, Kelly; Collins, Belva C.; Stenhoff, Donald M.; Kleinert, Harold (2008). Journal of Behavioral Education, v17 n3 p221-236. Retrieved from: https://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ802214
-
examining3Students, grade4
System of Least Prompts Intervention Report
Review Details
Reviewed: December 2017
- Single Case Design
- Meets WWC standards with reservations
This review may not reflect the full body of research evidence for this intervention.
Evidence Tier rating based solely on this study. This intervention may achieve a higher tier when combined with the full body of evidence.
Please see the WWC summary of evidence for System of Least Prompts.
Findings
To view more detailed information about the study findings from this review, please see System of Least Prompts Intervention Report (236 KB)
Evidence Tier rating based solely on this study. This intervention may achieve a higher tier when combined with the full body of evidence.
Sample Characteristics
Characteristics of study sample as reported by study author.
-
Female: 33%
Male: 67% -
Rural
Study Details
Setting
The study took place in a special education resource room for students with “functional mental disabilities” in a rural elementary school in the United States.
Study sample
This study included three fourth-grade students (Bea, Chip, and Max) with intellectual disability. Bea was a 9-year-old girl with an IQ of 60 measured with the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-4th Ed. (WISC-IV; Kaplan et al., 2004) and was diagnosed with “mild mental disability and a communication deficit in receptive language and expressive language.” Chip was a 10-year-old boy with an IQ of 61 on the WISC-IV, and had a diagnosis of “mild mental disability, cerebral palsy, epilepsy, and communication deficits in articulation, fluency, receptive language, and expressive language.” Max was a 9-year-old boy with an IQ of 45 on the WISC-IV, and had a diagnosis of “a moderate disability, a congenital heart condition, Down syndrome, and communication delays in expressive and receptive language and articulation.”
Intervention
The System of Least Prompts (SLP) was used to teach students to make two types of phone calls: live calls and recorded calls. The live call task involved 12 steps (such as stating a greeting and asking a question), and the recorded call task involved 11 steps (such as identifying the person being called and stating where the caller could be reached). The interventionist in the study was the resource room teacher. During the SLP sessions, the teacher provided a hierarchy of prompts to help students complete the steps correctly. This hierarchy included a (1) direct verbal prompt, (2) direct verbal prompt plus a model prompt, and (3) direct verbal prompt plus a physical prompt, if appropriate. At each prompt level, the participant had 3 seconds to initiate a response before the teacher would apply the next prompt. The teacher used this instructional practice twice a day (after breakfast and after lunch), working one-on-one with participants in the special education resource room. For each participant, instruction continued until the student was able to complete 100% of the steps independently for 3 days. The number of intervention sessions required to reach this criterion varied from 10 to 16. At the end of each session, regardless of performance, students would receive a stamp that could be traded for a reward once five stamps were accumulated. (This practice of giving students stamps to trade in for rewards was part of the standard classroom behavior management process used by the resource room teacher.)
Comparison
Baseline sessions took place in the same special education resource room as the intervention, after breakfast and after lunch, and required the students to complete the same steps as in the intervention phases. The teacher gave a cue to the participant such as, ‘‘It’s time to make phone calls,’’ and then presented the phone book to the student with the direction, ‘‘Who are you calling?’’ or ‘‘Let’s call (person’s name).’’ The teacher did not provide assistance or prompting. Students had 3 seconds to initiate a response but only one opportunity to complete each step. If a correct response was not provided by the student in that timeframe, the teacher prepared the student for the next step in the task. If the next step in the sequence was not performed correctly, the teacher ended the session.
An indicator of the effect of the intervention, the improvement index can be interpreted as the expected change in percentile rank for an average comparison group student if that student had received the intervention.
For more, please see the WWC Glossary entry for improvement index.
An outcome is the knowledge, skills, and attitudes that are attained as a result of an activity. An outcome measures is an instrument, device, or method that provides data on the outcome.
A finding that is included in the effectiveness rating. Excluded findings may include subgroups and subscales.
The sample on which the analysis was conducted.
The group to which the intervention group is compared, which may include a different intervention, business as usual, or no services.
The timing of the post-intervention outcome measure.
The number of students included in the analysis.
The mean score of students in the intervention group.
The mean score of students in the comparison group.
The WWC considers a finding to be statistically significant if the likelihood that the finding is due to chance alone, rather than a real difference, is less than five percent.
The WWC reviews studies for WWC products, Department of Education grant competitions, and IES performance measures.
The name and version of the document used to guide the review of the study.
The version of the WWC design standards used to guide the review of the study.
The result of the WWC assessment of the study. The rating is based on the strength of evidence of the effectiveness of the intervention. Studies are given a rating of Meets WWC Design Standards without Reservations, Meets WWC Design Standards with Reservations, or >Does Not Meet WWC Design Standards.
A related publication that was reviewed alongside the main study of interest.
Study findings for this report.
Based on the direction, magnitude, and statistical significance of the findings within a domain, the WWC characterizes the findings from a study as one of the following: statistically significant positive effects, substantively important positive effects, indeterminate effects, substantively important negative effects, and statistically significant negative effects. For more, please see the WWC Handbook.
The WWC may review studies for multiple purposes, including different reports and re-reviews using updated standards. Each WWC review of this study is listed in the dropdown. Details on any review may be accessed by making a selection from the drop down list.
Tier 1 Strong indicates strong evidence of effectiveness,
Tier 2 Moderate indicates moderate evidence of effectiveness, and
Tier 3 Promising indicates promising evidence of effectiveness,
as defined in the
non-regulatory guidance for ESSA
and the regulations for ED discretionary grants (EDGAR Part 77).