Effectiveness of interventions for improving educational outcomes for people with disabilities in low- and middle-income countries: A systematic review

IF 4 Q1 SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY
Xanthe Hunt, Ashrita Saran, Howard White, Hannah Kuper
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No restrictions in terms of date or format were placed on the search, but only English-language publications were eligible for inclusion.</p>\n </section>\n \n <section>\n \n <h3> Selection Criteria</h3>\n \n <p>In our review, we included studies on the basis that they were able to detect intervention impact. Descriptive studies of various designs and methodologies were not included. We also excluded any study with a sample size of fewer than five participants. We included studies which examined the impact of interventions for people with disabilities living in LMICs. There were no restrictions on comparators/comparison groups in included studies. However, to be eligible for inclusion, a study needed to have both an eligible intervention and an eligible outcome. 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Individuals with intellectual or learning and developmental impairments were most frequently targeted by interventions (<i>n</i> = 17). The category of interventions most represented across studies was ‘Educational attainment support’, for instance, a reading comprehension intervention that combined strategy instruction (graphic organisers, visual displays, mnemonic illustrations, computer exercises, predicting, inference, text structure awareness, main idea identification, summarisation, and questioning) for children with dyslexia. The second most common category of intervention was ‘Accessible learning environments’, for instance, programmes which aimed to improve social skills or to reduce rates of victimisation of children with disabilities in schools. 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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

People with disabilities are consistently falling behind in educational outcomes compared to their peers without disabilities, whether measured in terms of school enrolment, school completion, mean years of schooling, or literacy levels. These inequalities in education contribute to people with disabilities being less likely to achieve employment, or earn as much if they are employed, as people without disabilities. Evidence suggests that the gap in educational attainment for people with and without disabilities is greatest in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Exclusion of people with disabilities from mainstream education, and low rates of participation in education of any kind, are important issues for global equity. Interventions which might have a positive impact include those that improve educational outcomes for people with disabilities, whether delivered in specialist or inclusive education settings. Such interventions involve a wide range of initiatives, from those focused on the individual level – such as teaching assistance to make mainstream classes more accessible to children with specific learning needs – to those which address policy or advocacy.

Objectives

The objectives of this review were to answer the following research questions: (1) What is the nature of the interventions used to support education for people with disabilities in LMICs? (2) What is the size and quality of the evidence base of the effectiveness of interventions to improve educational outcomes for people with disabilities in LMICs? (3) What works to improve educational outcomes for people with disabilities in LMICs? (4) Which interventions appear to be most effective for different types of disability? (5) What are the barriers and facilitators to the improvement of educational outcomes for people with disabilities? (6) Is there evidence of cumulative effects of interventions?

Search Methods

The search for studies followed two steps. Firstly, we conducted an electronic search of databases and sector-specific websites. Then, after initial screening, we examined the reference lists of all identified reviews and screened the cited studies for inclusion. We also conducted a forward search and an ancestral search. No restrictions in terms of date or format were placed on the search, but only English-language publications were eligible for inclusion.

Selection Criteria

In our review, we included studies on the basis that they were able to detect intervention impact. Descriptive studies of various designs and methodologies were not included. We also excluded any study with a sample size of fewer than five participants. We included studies which examined the impact of interventions for people with disabilities living in LMICs. There were no restrictions on comparators/comparison groups in included studies. However, to be eligible for inclusion, a study needed to have both an eligible intervention and an eligible outcome. Any duration of follow-up was eligible for inclusion.

Data Collection and Analysis

We used EppiReviewer for bibliographic management, screening, coding, and data synthesis. Eligibility was assessed using a predesigned form based on the inclusion criteria developed by the authors. We piloted all coding sheets with at least five studies before use. The form allowed for coding of multiple intervention domains and multiple outcomes domains. The entire screening process was reported using a PRISMA flow chart. We screened all unique references from our search title and abstract, with two independent reviewers determining relevance, and repeated this process for full texts. Data was extracted from studies according to a coding sheet. Coding included: (1) extraction of basic study characteristics, (2) a narrative summary of procedures and findings (including recording of iatrogenic effects), (3) a summary of findings/results table, (4) an assessment of confidence in study findings, and (5) creation of a forest plot of effect sizes. A third data collector, a research associate, checked the results of this process. Confidence in study findings was assessed using a standardised tool. All coding categories were not mutually exclusive and so multiple coding was done where an intervention covered more than one category of intervention.

Main Results

Twenty-eight studies were included in this review. Most studies (n = 25) targeted children with disabilities. Only two studies directly targeted family members, and the remaining three focused on service providers. Individuals with intellectual or learning and developmental impairments were most frequently targeted by interventions (n = 17). The category of interventions most represented across studies was ‘Educational attainment support’, for instance, a reading comprehension intervention that combined strategy instruction (graphic organisers, visual displays, mnemonic illustrations, computer exercises, predicting, inference, text structure awareness, main idea identification, summarisation, and questioning) for children with dyslexia. The second most common category of intervention was ‘Accessible learning environments’, for instance, programmes which aimed to improve social skills or to reduce rates of victimisation of children with disabilities in schools. Regarding intervention effects, included studies concerned with ‘Conditions for inclusion of people with disabilities in education’ showed a moderately significant effect, and one study concerned with teacher knowledge showed a significant effect size. Among the 18 studies included in the analysis of intervention effects on ‘Skills for learning’, 12 interventions had a significant effect. When considering the effect of interventions on different outcomes, we see that the effect on literacy, cognitive skills, handwriting, and numeracy are significant. All these effects are large but are based on a low number of studies. The studies concerned with speech and school behaviour show no significant effect of intervention. Across studies, heterogeneity is high, and risk of publication bias varies but was frequently high. All but one study received an overall rating of low confidence in study findings. However, this lack of confidence across studies was largely due to the use of low-rigour study designs and was not always reflective of multiple points of weakness within a given study.

Authors' Conclusions

Children with disabilities fall behind in educational outcomes as the current school systems are not set up to teach children with different impairment types. There is no one ‘magic bullet’ intervention which can equalise health outcomes for this group. A twin-track approach is needed, which both addresses the specific needs of children with disabilities but also ensures that they are included in mainstream activities (e.g., through improving the skills of teachers and accessibility of the classroom). However, currently most interventions included in this systematic review targeted individual children with disabilities in an attempt to improve their functioning, skills, and competencies, but did not focus on mainstreaming these children into the school by system-level or school-level changes. Consequently, a focus on evaluation of interventions which target not just the individual with a disability but also their broader environment, are needed.

Abstract Image

改善低收入和中等收入国家残疾人教育成果的干预措施的有效性:一项系统评价
无论以入学率、学业完成率、平均受教育年限还是识字率来衡量,残疾人在教育成果方面始终落后于非残疾人同龄人。这些教育方面的不平等导致残疾人就业的可能性较低,或者即使就业也挣得与非残疾人一样多。有证据表明,在低收入和中等收入国家,残疾人和非残疾人在受教育程度上的差距最大。将残疾人排除在主流教育之外,以及任何形式的教育参与率低,都是全球公平的重要问题。可能产生积极影响的干预措施包括那些改善残疾人教育成果的干预措施,无论是在专科教育还是全纳教育环境中实施。这些干预措施涉及范围广泛的倡议,从侧重于个人一级的倡议- -例如提供教学援助,使有特殊学习需要的儿童更容易进入主流课程- -到涉及政策或宣传的倡议。本综述的目的是回答以下研究问题:(1)中低收入国家用于支持残疾人教育的干预措施的性质是什么?(2)低收入中低收入国家改善残疾人教育成果的干预措施有效性的证据基础的规模和质量如何?(3)如何改善低收入中低收入残疾人的教育成果?(4)哪些干预措施对不同类型的残疾最有效?(5)改善残疾人士教育成果的障碍和促进因素是什么?(6)是否有证据表明干预措施具有累积效应?研究的搜索分为两个步骤。首先,我们对数据库和特定行业的网站进行了电子搜索。然后,在初步筛选之后,我们检查了所有确定的综述的参考文献列表,并筛选了被引用的研究以纳入。我们还进行了前向搜索和祖先搜索。对检索没有日期或格式的限制,但只有英文出版物才有资格纳入。在我们的综述中,我们纳入了能够检测干预影响的研究。各种设计和方法的描述性研究未包括在内。我们还排除了任何样本量少于5人的研究。我们纳入了调查干预措施对低收入中低收入残疾人影响的研究。在纳入的研究中,对比较者/对照组没有限制。然而,为了有资格纳入,一项研究需要有合格的干预措施和合格的结果。任何随访时间均符合纳入条件。我们使用EppiReviewer进行书目管理、筛选、编码和数据合成。根据作者制定的纳入标准,使用预先设计的表格评估入选资格。在使用之前,我们对所有编码表进行了至少五项研究。该形式允许对多个干预域和多个结果域进行编码。整个筛选过程使用PRISMA流程图进行报告。我们从搜索标题和摘要中筛选所有独特的参考文献,由两名独立审稿人确定相关性,并对全文重复此过程。根据编码表从研究中提取数据。编码包括:(1)基本研究特征的提取,(2)程序和结果的叙述性总结(包括医源性效应的记录),(3)结果/结果表的总结,(4)研究结果的置信度评估,以及(5)效应大小的森林图的创建。第三个数据收集者,一个研究助理,检查了这个过程的结果。使用标准化工具评估研究结果的可信度。所有编码类别都不是相互排斥的,因此,当干预措施涵盖一个以上类别的干预措施时,进行多重编码。本综述共纳入28项研究。大多数研究(n = 25)针对残疾儿童。 只有两项研究直接针对家庭成员,其余三项研究关注的是服务提供者。有智力或学习和发育障碍的个体最常成为干预的目标(n = 17)。研究中最具代表性的干预类别是“教育成就支持”,例如,一种结合策略指导(图形组织、视觉展示、助记插图、计算机练习、预测、推理、文本结构意识、主要思想识别、总结和提问)的阅读理解干预,针对患有阅读障碍的儿童。第二个最常见的干预类别是“无障碍学习环境”,例如,旨在提高社交技能或减少学校残疾儿童受害率的方案。关于干预效果,纳入的有关“残疾人士参与教育的条件”的研究显示出中等显著的影响,一项有关教师知识的研究显示出显著的效应量。在分析干预对“学习技能”的影响的18项研究中,有12项干预有显著影响。当考虑干预对不同结果的影响时,我们发现对读写能力、认知技能、书写和计算能力的影响是显著的。所有这些影响都很大,但基于的研究数量很少。有关言语和学校行为的研究显示干预没有显著的效果。在所有研究中,异质性很高,发表偏倚的风险各不相同,但往往很高。除了一项研究外,所有研究的总体信任度都很低。然而,这些研究之间缺乏信心主要是由于使用了低严格性的研究设计,并不总是反映出给定研究中的多个弱点。残疾儿童在教育成果上落后的原因是目前的学校系统没有为不同类型的残疾儿童提供教育。没有一种“灵丹妙药”干预措施可以使这一群体的健康结果平衡。需要采取双轨办法,既要满足残疾儿童的具体需要,又要确保他们被纳入主流活动(例如,通过提高教师的技能和教室的无障碍环境)。然而,目前该系统评价中包含的大多数干预措施都是针对残疾儿童个体,试图改善他们的功能、技能和能力,而不是通过系统层面或学校层面的改变将这些儿童纳入学校主流。因此,需要重点评价不仅针对残疾人个人而且也针对其更广泛环境的干预措施。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Campbell Systematic Reviews
Campbell Systematic Reviews Social Sciences-Social Sciences (all)
CiteScore
5.50
自引率
21.90%
发文量
80
审稿时长
6 weeks
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