The Association Between Parent Engagement and Child Outcomes in Social Skills Training Programs: Discovering the Secret Agent Society in Partnership

IF 0.6 Q4 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
D. Costley, S. Baldwin, T. Clark, P. Howlin, J. Taffe, Renae Beaumont, K. Gray, S. Einfeld, Jennifer Smith‐Merry, Jacqueline Roberts, K. Sofronoff
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Previous research in clinical, community, and school settings has demonstrated positive outcomes for the Secret Agent Society (SAS) social skills training program. This is designed to help children on the autism spectrum become more aware of emotions in themselves and others and to ‘problem-solve’ complex social scenarios. Parents play a key role in the implementation of the SAS program, attending information and support sessions with other parents and providing supervision, rewards, and feedback as their children complete weekly ‘home mission’ assignments. Drawing on data from a school-based evaluation of the SAS program, we examined whether parents’ engagement with these elements of the intervention was linked to the quality of their children’s participation and performance. Sixty-eight 8–14-year-olds (M age = 10.7) with a diagnosis of autism participated in the program. The findings indicated that ratings of parental engagement were positively correlated with children’s competence in completing home missions and with the quality of their contribution during group teaching sessions. However, there was a less consistent relationship between parental engagement and measures of children’s social and emotional skill gains over the course of the program.
社交技能训练项目中父母参与与儿童结果的关系:发现伙伴关系中的秘密特工社会
先前在临床、社区和学校环境下的研究已经证明了秘密特工协会(SAS)社交技能培训项目的积极效果。这是为了帮助自闭症儿童更好地意识到自己和他人的情绪,并“解决”复杂的社会场景。家长在SAS计划的实施中起着关键作用,与其他家长一起参加信息和支持会议,并在孩子完成每周的“家庭任务”作业时提供监督、奖励和反馈。利用基于学校的SAS项目评估数据,我们检查了父母参与干预的这些要素是否与孩子参与和表现的质量有关。68名被诊断为自闭症的8 - 14岁儿童(M年龄= 10.7)参加了这个项目。研究结果显示,家长参与的评分与儿童完成家庭任务的能力和他们在小组教学中的贡献质量呈正相关。然而,在整个项目过程中,父母的参与与孩子的社交和情感技能的提高之间的关系不太一致。
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
1.50
自引率
14.30%
发文量
14
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