Small-Group Emergent Literacy Intervention Dosage in Preschool: Patterns and Predictors

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Shayne B. Piasta, Alida K. Hudson, Robin C. Sayers, Jessica A. R. Logan, Kandia Lewis, Cynthia M. Zettler-Greeley, Laura L. Bailet
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Abstract

Intervention dosage is foundational to realizing intended impacts but is often variable, particularly when interventions are implemented under real-world conditions. In this study, we examined dosage of small-group emergent literacy intervention experienced by preschool children ( n = 154) identified as at risk for later reading difficulties in authentic classroom settings. We documented considerable variability in dosage that was largely due to when instructors stopped offering lessons. Drawing from extant literature and an ecological orientation, we found that instructor factors (i.e., instructor self-efficacy for teaching language and literacy, instructor perception of lesson acceptability, average small-group size) and classroom factors (i.e., classroom teachers’ self-efficacy for decision-making), but not child factors, significantly predicted children’s intervention dosage. Moreover, most variance could be attributed to differences between small groups/instructors rather than individual differences among children. We discuss implications for preschool teachers, administrators, researchers, and intervention developers seeking to better support successful small-group intervention implementation.
学龄前小群体紧急识字干预剂量:模式和预测因素
干预剂量是实现预期影响的基础,但往往是可变的,特别是在实际条件下实施干预时。在本研究中,我们检测了在真实的课堂环境中,被确定有阅读困难风险的学龄前儿童(n = 154)所经历的小组紧急读写干预的剂量。我们记录了相当大的剂量变化,这主要是由于教师何时停止提供课程。根据现有文献和生态取向,我们发现教师因素(即教师对教学语言和素养的自我效能感、教师对课程可接受性的感知、平均小团体规模)和课堂因素(即课堂教师对决策的自我效能感)对儿童的干预剂量有显著影响,而儿童因素对干预剂量没有显著影响。此外,大多数差异可归因于小团体/教师之间的差异,而不是儿童之间的个体差异。我们讨论了对学前教师、管理人员、研究人员和干预开发者寻求更好地支持成功的小团体干预实施的启示。
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
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.10%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: The Journal of Early Intervention (JEI) publishes articles related to research and practice in early intervention for infants and young children with special needs and their families. Early intervention is defined broadly as procedures that facilitate the development of infants and young children who have special needs or who are at risk for developmental disabilities. The childhood years in which early intervention might occur begin at birth, or before birth for some prevention programs, and extend through the years in which children traditionally begin elementary school.
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