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Early Intervention and Early Learning

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Examining the Potential Efficacy of a Classroom Wide Model for Promoting Social Emotional Development and Addressing Challenging Behavior in Preschool Children With and Without Disabilities

Year: 2007
Name of Institution:
Vanderbilt University
Goal: Development and Innovation
Principal Investigator:
Hemmeter, Mary Louise
Award Amount: $1,835,866
Award Period: 3/1/2007 to 2/28/2011
Award Number: R324A070212

Description:

Purpose: Although research has established a positive relationship between young children's social emotional skills and success in school, large numbers of young children are beginning their school experiences without the emotional, social, and behavioral skills necessary for academic success. The purpose of this project is to refine the Teaching Pyramid intervention, a multi-tiered intervention to address the social emotional development and challenging behavior of young children with or at risk for disabilities. The research team will further develop the intervention and then conduct an initial evaluation of the intervention in public preschool classrooms.

Project Activities: The research team will first develop and field test intervention materials for teachers and establish the technical adequacy of a tool for measuring implementation fidelity. The team will then conduct an initial evaluation of the intervention in 40 classrooms randomly assigned to intervention classrooms or control classrooms. Teachers randomized to the intervention condition will be provided with training, technical assistance, and materials needed for the intervention and will be compared to teachers who are implementing "business as usual" practices. Researchers will assess whether intervention classrooms have improved teacher and child outcomes compared to control classrooms.

Products: The products of this study include a fully developed intervention focused on promoting young children's social and emotional development and reducing challenging behavior, and validated measures of implementation fidelity. Published reports on the initial evaluation of the developed intervention on key outcomes such as student's behavior and social development, teacher-child interactions, overall classroom behavior and classroom climate will also be available.

Structured Abstract

Purpose: Although research has established a positive relationship between young children's social emotional skills and success in school, large numbers of young children are beginning their school experiences without the emotional, social, and behavioral skills necessary for academic success. The purpose of this project is to refine the Teaching Pyramid intervention, a multi-tiered intervention to address the social emotional development and challenging behavior of young children with or at risk for disabilities. The research team will further develop the intervention and then conduct an initial evaluation of the intervention in public preschool classrooms.

Setting: Public preschool classrooms in urban areas in Tennessee and Florida.

Population: A total of 40 preschool classrooms that serve children with, at risk for, and without disabilities.

Intervention: The Teaching Pyramid provides educators with a multi-tiered model of universal strategies (classroom preventive practices), secondary strategies (social emotional teaching strategies), and targeted interventions (individualized interventions) focused on promoting young children's social and emotional development and reducing challenging behavior.

Research Design and Methods: Phase 1 will involve developing and field testing implementation materials for teachers and establishing the psychometric integrity of an observation for measuring implementation fidelity. Phase 2 will involve an initial evaluation of the intervention in 40 classrooms (20 intervention and 20 control) in Tennessee and Florida. The design is a cluster-randomized trial with random assignment at the classroom level.

Control Condition: Control classrooms will consist of teachers who are implementing "business as usual" practices.

Key Measures: The project will collect demographic and descriptive measures as well as measures of intervention fidelity, teacher and classroom variables, and children's social skills and behavioral development. Key classroom-level measures include the Classroom Assessment Scoring System, the Arnett Caregiver Interaction Scale, The Engagement Checklist II, and direct observations of classroom behavior. Child-level measures include the Caregiver-Teacher Report Form, Child Behavior Checklist, and the Social Skills Rating System Preschool Version.

Data Analytic Strategy: To establish the psychometric integrity of intervention instruments, generalizability theory and measures of concurrent validity will be used. Panels of key stakeholders will review implementation guides for teachers, and classroom teachers will field test the guides. Revisions to the guide will be based on reported usability, satisfaction, impact on practice, additional supports needed to implement the practices, and impact on children's behavior and engagement. To evaluate initial impact of the intervention, the research team will analyze the data using a random regression model, which takes into account the nested nature of the data.

Publications

Book chapter

Fox, L., and Hemmeter, M.L. (2009). A Program-Wide Model for Supporting Social Emotional Development and Addressing Challenging Behavior in Early Childhood Settings. In W. Sailor, G. Dunlap, G. Sugai, and R. Horner (Eds.), Handbook of Positive Behavior Support (pp. 177–202). New York: Springer.

Hemmeter, M.L., and Conroy, M. (2012). Supporting the Social Competence of Young Children With Challenging Behavior in the Context of the Teaching Pyramid Model: Research-Based Practices and Implementation in Early Childhood Settings. In R. Pianta, L. Justice, S. Barnett, and S. Sheridan (Eds.), The Handbook of Early Education (pp. 416–434). New York: Guilford Press.

Snyder, P., McLaughlin, T., and Denney, M. (2011). Frameworks for Guiding Program Focus and Practices in Early Intervention. In J.M. Kauffman, D.P. Hallahan, and M. Conroy (Eds.), Handbook of Special Education (pp. 716–730). New York: Routledge.

Journal article, monograph, or newsletter

Artman, K. and Hemmeter, M. L. (2013). Effects of Training and Feedback on Teachers' Use of Classroom Preventive Practices. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 33(2): 112–123. doi:10.1177/0271121412447115 Full text

Fox, L., Hemmeter, M.L., Snyder, P., Binder, D., and Clarke, S. (2011). Coaching Early Childhood Special Educators to Implement a Comprehensive Model for Promoting Young Children's Social Competence. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 31(3): 178–192. doi:10.1177/0271121411404440

Hemmeter, M. L., Snyder, P., Fox, L., and Algina, J. (2016). Evaluating the Implementation of the "Pyramid Model for Promoting Social-Emotional Competence" in Early Childhood Classrooms. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 36(3): 133–146. doi:10.1177/0271121416653386 Full text

Hemmeter, M.L., Ostrosky, M., and Corso, R. (2012). Preventing and Addressing Challenging Behavior: Common Questions and Practical Strategies. Young Exceptional Children, 15(2): 32–46. doi:10.1177/1096250611427350

Hemmeter, M.L., Snyder, P., Kinder, K., and Artman, K. (2011). Impact of Performance Feedback Delivered via Electronic Mail on Preschool Teachers' Use of Descriptive Praise. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 26(1): 96–109. doi:10.1016/j.ecresq.2010.05.004

Sousa, D.A., Luze, G., and Hughes-Belding, K. (2014). Preferences and Attitudes toward Progress Reporting Methods of Parents From Diverse Backgrounds. Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 28(4): 499–512. doi:10.1080/02568543.2014.945021?

Steiner, P.M., Cook, T.D., Li, W., and Clark, M.H. (2015). Bias Reduction in Quasi-Experiments With Little Selection Theory but Many Covariates. Journal of Research on Educational Effectiveness, 8(4): 552–576. doi:10.1080/19345747.2014.978058

Strain, P.S., Joseph, G., and Hemmeter, M.L. (2009). Young Children's Problem Behavior: Impact, Intervention and Innovations. Early Childhood Services, 3(2): 1–14.