Project Activities
This project will develop a PD model for ASAP (PD-ASAP) and test the promise of the model for improving teacher and student outcomes for preschool classrooms with children with ASD. The study will include three phases: (1) feedback and adaptations, (2) design experimentation, and (3) a pilot study using a randomized controlled trial.
Structured Abstract
Setting
The research will take place in preschool classrooms in North Carolina.
Sample
Participants in Phase 1 include an estimated 64 previous and potential end users (including educational team members, administrators, and parents of students with ASD) and expert advisory board members. Phase 2 will include 24 preschool educators and approximately 18 students with ASD. Phase 3 participants will include 80 preschool educators and approximately 60 students with ASD.
Intervention
The research team anticipates that the PD-ASAP model will consist of six steps—orientation, initial planning, initial training, implementation, coaching, and booster training. PD-ASAP will incorporate activities, strategies, and tools that address core components of the Normalization Process Theory to improve the learning, use, and sustainability of the ASAP intervention. ASAP is a manualized intervention with two content components (social-communication and play) and two context components (1:1 and group) and is intended to be a supplemental intervention that can be embedded into preschool classrooms serving children with ASD. It is a process-oriented approach that uses evidence-based practices and data-based decision making to support preschoolers with ASD in moving through a developmental hierarchy of social-communication and play skills.
Research design and methods
In Phase 1, the research team will use interviews, surveys, and focus groups to develop the PD. In Phase 2, the team will use design experimentation and rapid iterations to test and revise PD-ASAP. The pilot study, in Phase 3, will employ a cluster randomized trial in which schools will be randomly assigned to one of two groups – PD-ASAP or ASAP with the manual only. The team will examine the efficacy of PD-ASAP in improving educator outcomes (ASAP fidelity, self-efficacy, burnout) and student outcomes (engagement, social-communication, play). During this phase, the team will use the ingredients method to calculate the costs of implementation for each group.
Control condition
For the pilot study, the control condition will implement ASAP using only the manual, which includes a brief video training.
Key measures
Measures used in Phase 1 will include researcher-developed interviews, surveys and focus groups. Phase 2 will include a measure of educator fidelity of implementation of ASAP (researcher-developed ASAP-FOI), student joint engagement (Joint Engagement Coding), and educator ratings of child social-communication and play (researcher-developed, video-anchored rating tool used in previous ASAP studies). Phase 3measures will include educator measures of ASAP-FOI as a proximal outcome, and teacher self-efficacy (Autism Self-Efficacy for Teachers) and burnout (Maslach Burnout Inventory – Educator Survey) as distal outcomes. For student outcomes, the project will use the same measure of student joint attention as well as social-communication and play as measured by the Brief Observation of Social Communication Change.
Data analytic strategy
In Phase 1, the research team will use the Rapid Assessment Process to synthesize the mixed methods data, a process that combines deductive and inductive data analysis to triangulate the information. Phase 2 will use weekly design experimentation meetings to review data and make iterative changes to the PD-ASAP model. Phase 3, the pilot study, will use hierarchical linear models to account for student nesting within schools to examine differences between the two groups. The CostOut tool will be used to estimate start-up and maintenance costs of PD-ASAP and ASAP at student, staff, school, and district levels.
People and institutions involved
IES program contact(s)
Products and publications
Products: The primary products of this project include a fully developed adapted PD model to be used with the ASAP intervention. The project will also result in peer-reviewed publications and presentations as well as additional dissemination products that reach education stakeholders such as practitioners and policymakers.
Related projects
Supplemental information
Co-Principal Investigators: Watson, Linda; Reszka, Stephanie
Questions about this project?
To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.