以同伴为媒介的干预措施,提高大学校园中智障和发育障碍青少年的对话技能

IF 1.5 4区 医学 Q2 EDUCATION, SPECIAL
Leslie Ann Bross, Emily Wall, Monique Pinczynski, Ashley Anderson, Thai Williams, Charles L. Wood, Fred Spooner
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在大学校园里,有智力和发育障碍(IDD)的年轻人很容易受到排斥和缺乏社会参与。然而,同伴可以在社交/沟通技能方面为智障青年提供有意义的支持。本研究的目的是提高四名患有 IDD 的年轻人(22-23 岁)在大学校园的正常午休时间的交谈技能。因变量是使用部分间隔录音程序测量的 10 分钟录音过程中的对话参与百分比。发育正常的同伴担任同伴辅导员,并提供结构化或自然的支持。实验 1 采用交替处理设计,比较了同伴辅导单独与同伴辅导 + 目标设定的效果,以及两个相邻的基线条件和最后的学生选择条件。实验 1 的结果表明,单纯的同伴辅导和目标设定的叠加效应比单纯的自然支持更有效。实验 2 采用抽离设计,比较了智障青少年与残疾同学和非残疾同学交谈的效果。实验 2 的参与者在以自然的方式与无残疾同学交谈时,表现出了更高的对话参与度。根据调查问卷和退出访谈的报告,对所有类型的参与者而言,不同同伴中介干预的社会有效性总体较高。我们提供了针对大专院校中智障青少年的同伴中介干预的实践意义和未来研究建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Peer-Mediated Interventions to Enhance Conversation Skills of Young Adults with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities on a University Campus

Peer-Mediated Interventions to Enhance Conversation Skills of Young Adults with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities on a University Campus

Young adults with intellectual and developmental disabilities (IDD) on college campuses are vulnerable to exclusion and a lack of social participation. However, peers can provide meaningful supports to young adults with IDD in the area of social/communication skills. The purpose of this study was to enhance the conversation skills of four young adults with IDD (ages 22–23) during their regular lunch breaks on a university campus. The dependent variable was percent of conversational engagement during 10-min audio recorded sessions as measured using partial interval recording procedures. Typically developing peers served as peer coaches and provided structured or natural supports. Experiment 1 used an alternating treatments design to compare the effects of peer coaching alone vs. peer coaching + goal setting with two adjacent baseline conditions and a final student-choice condition. Results for Experiment 1 indicated peer coaching alone and the additive effects of goal setting was more effective than natural supports only. Experiment 2 used a withdrawal design to compare the effects of young adults with IDD speaking with fellow classmates with disabilities vs. peers without disabilities. Participants in Experiment 2 demonstrated higher levels of conversational engagement when speaking with peers without disabilities in a natural manner. Social validity of the different peer-mediated interventions was overall high for all participant types as reported on questionnaires and exit interviews. We provide implications for practice and suggestions for future research related to peer-mediated interventions for young adults with IDD on college and university campuses.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.40
自引率
5.60%
发文量
54
期刊介绍: The Journal of Developmental and Physical Disabilities is an interdisciplinary forum for the publication of original research and clinical reports from a variety of fields serving persons with developmental and physical disabilities. Submissions from researchers, clinicians, and related professionals in the fields of psychology, rehabilitation, special education, kinesiology, counseling, social work, psychiatry, nursing, and rehabilitation medicine are considered. Investigations utilizing group comparisons as well as single-case experimental designs are of primary interest. In addition, case studies that are of particular clinical relevance or that describe innovative evaluation and intervention techniques are welcome. All research and clinical reports should contain sufficient procedural detail so that readers can clearly understand what was done, how it was done, and why the strategy was selected. Rigorously conducted replication studies utilizing group and single-case designs are welcome irrespective of results obtained. In addition, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, and theoretical discussions that contribute substantially to understanding the problems and strengths of persons with developmental and physical disabilities are considered for publication. Authors are encouraged to preregister empirical studies, replications, systematic reviews, and meta-analyses in a relevant public database and to include such information with their submission to the journal. Authors are also encouraged, where possible and applicable, to deposit data that support the findings of their research in a public repository (see detailed “Research Data Policy” module in the journal’s Instructions for Authors). In response to the need for increased clinical and research endeavors with persons with developmental and physical disabilities, the journal is cross-categorical and unbiased methodologically.
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