Title: METHODS
1Effects of the Getting Ready Intervention on
Childrens Interpersonal Competencies The
Moderating Role of Child and Family Risk Kathryn
E. Woods, Susan M. Sheridan, Allison Q. Osborn,
Brandy L. Clarke, Kevin A. Kupzyk
Figure 1. DECA Initiative
Figure 2. DECA Attachment
- Interpersonal Competence
- A childs early years are critical to his or her
social-emotional development (Zeanah, Stafford,
Nagle, Rice, - 2005).
- Children with a strong sense of social-emotional
competence engage more with peers and teachers, - participate in classroom activities, enjoy
learning, and are more likely to experience a
positive transition - from preschool to kindergarten (Raver
Knitzer, 2002) and future academic achievement
(Hemmeter, - Ostrosky, Fox, 2006).
- Many young children, particularly those living in
poverty, enter school without the interpersonal
competence - necessary to succeed in a formal educational
setting (Raver Knitzer, 2002 Zill, Moore,
Smith, Stief, - Coiro, 1991).
- Few studies have examined the development of
social-emotional skills among Spanish speaking
students - (Rumberger Tran, 2006) however
social-emotional development may be impaired when
children have - difficulty communicating and understanding peers
and teachers. - Young children with disabilities may also
struggle to understand their social environment
and often have - difficulty developing social relationships,
being accepted by peers, interpreting social
cues, learning and - demonstrating social competencies and adapting
to new environments (Most, Al-Yagon, Tur-Kaspa,
Margalit, - 2000).
- Early intervention services may assist children
at risk in developing their social-emotional
competence and - may be especially influential when focused on
strengthening home environments and parent-child
- Measures
- Teachers rated student interpersonal competence
at baseline and follow-up using - Devereaux Early Childhood Assessment (DECA
LeBuffe Naglieri, 1999) attachment and
initiative - subscales
- Attachment (8 items) assesses the mutual, strong,
long-lasting relationship between a child and - significant adults (e.g., parents, teachers)
- Initiative (12 items) assesses the childs
ability to think and act independently - Teachers rated child behavior using a 5-point
Likert scale (0 never 4 very frequently) - T scores with M 50, SD 10
- Social Competence and Behavior Evaluation short
form (SCBE-30 LaFreniere Dumas, 1996) Social - Competence and Anxiety Withdrawal subscales.
- Social Competency (10 items) assesses positive
qualities of a childs adaptation - Anxiety-withdrawal (10 items) consists of items
describing depressed, isolated, and overly
dependent - behavior
- Items are rated on a 6-point Likert scale (1
never, 6 always) - Raw scores on a scale of 1 (low) to 6 (high)
- Moderators
- Child risk consisted of language (i.e., speaking
a language other than English) and disability
status (i.e., parent
Figure 3. SCBE Anxiety Withdrawal
Figure 4. SCBE Social Competence
- Research Question 1
- Outcomes of the multilevel analyses assessing the
impact of the Getting Ready intervention on child
- interpersonal competence are presented in Table
1 and Figures 1 through 4. - The Getting Ready treatment group experienced
significantly greater gains over time in
attachment behaviors - compared to controls as measured by the DECA ?
0.29, t(160) 2.88, p lt .05, d 0.75. - Relative to controls, the treatment group had
significantly different rates of change in
initiative ?0.19, - t(156) 2.12, p lt .05, d .56.
- A greater reduction in anxiety/withdrawal
behaviors over time as measured on the SCBE-30 ?
-0.02, - t(160) -2.91, p lt .05, d -.74 was observed
for the treatment group compared to controls. - Research Question 2
- A summary table describing the effect of child
language and disability status as moderators on
child - interpersonal competencies is presented in
Table 2. - Language status moderated the effectiveness of
the Getting Ready intervention on all
interpersonal outcomes - (i.e., DECA Initiative and Attachment SCBE
Anxiety-Withdrawal and Social Competency). The
Getting - Ready intervention was more effective for
children who did not speak English relative to
those who did, and - relative to the control group.
- Disability status moderated effectiveness of the
Getting Ready intervention on two outcomes (i.e.,
DECA - Initiative and SCBE Social Competency). The
Getting Ready was significantly more effective
for children - with disabilities than those without
disabilities, and then the control condition.
- Getting Ready Intervention
- The Getting Ready intervention is an ecological,
relationship-based approach to school readiness
for families - with children from birth to 5 years of age who
are of low income and participating in home- and
center- - based early education programs.
- A primary emphasis of the Getting Ready
intervention is promoting parent engagement via
parental warmth - and sensitivity, support for a childs emerging
autonomy, and active participation in learning. - Getting Ready integrates triadic
(parentchildprofessional McCollum Yates,
1994) and collaborative - (familyschool) strategies (Sheridan
Kratochwill, 2008) to promote parentchild and
parentprofessional - partnerships.
- Triadic strategies prompt warm, supportive
parentchild interactions affirm parents
competence focus - parents attention on child development or
skills provide developmental information and
model and/or - suggest parent actions that can support child
learning. - Collaborative strategies involve planning between
parents and teachers to identify child strengths,
- determine important socialemotional learning
goals, assess current levels of child
functioning, - brainstorm plans to support a childs
socialemotional growth, and monitor child
progress. - Getting Ready has been found to promote
interpersonal competence for young children
(Sheridan et al., in - press) however, the degree to which certain
child and family risk factors moderate the
effects needs to be - investigated.
- ANALYSIS
- Multilevel modeling (Snijders Bosker, 1999)
was used to test growth curves among dependent
variables - with a .05.
- Multilevel models included fixed effects for
treatment group, the linear effect of time, and
the group by time - interaction for all variables in the set.
- Analyses were conducted with SAS PROC MIXED
using residual maximum likelihood (REML) with - Kenward-Roger degrees of freedom, to produces
unbiased estimating equations for the variance
parameters - and evaluate the fixed effects.
- The study design is a 4-level complex sampling
design (repeated observations level 1 nested
within each - child level 2, children nested within
teachers or classrooms level 3, and classrooms
nested within schools - or programs level 4 no significant random
effects for school or teacher were observed. - Since random assignment to treatment condition
occurred at the teacher/classroom level, random
effects at - the teacher and school levels were constrained
to a minimal positive value (0.01) for model
parsimony. - Time was centered to reflect the number of
months since randomization. - Missing data due primarily to planned
missingness caused by the cohort nature of the
study design was - accounted for by the use of FIML in the growth
curve modeling framework in SAS PROC MIXED, which
- allows data from incomplete cases to be
included in the analysis. - Tests of moderation were carried out by adding
each moderator as a time X group X moderator
effect, - including the main effect of the moderator and
each two-way interaction. The three-way
interaction term
Table 3
- DISCUSSION
- This study revealed significant differences
between treatment - and control participants in the rate of change
over time for - certain interpersonal competencies (i.e.,
attachment, initiative, - anxiety withdrawal).
- Getting Ready was more effective at improving
outcomes for - non-English speaking than English-speaking
children across all - interpersonal outcomes.
Child Language Disability Status
DECA Initiative X X
DECA Attachment X
SCBE Anxiety Withdrawal X
SCBE Social Competence X X
- PURPOSE OF STUDY AND RESEARCH QUESTIONS
- The purpose of this study was to examine the
moderating effects of child and family risk
factors on the - Getting Ready intervention and interpersonal
outcomes for young children living in poverty. - To what extent does the Getting Ready
intervention improve preschool students'
interpersonal - competence relative to a control group?
- To what extent do child and family risk factors
moderate the effects of the Getting Ready
intervention on - preschool students' interpersonal competence?
.
- Children with identified disabilities in the
treatment group improved at a much higher rate
than children - without a disability, and children in the
control group, on DECA Initiative and SCBE Social
Competence - outcomes.
- The direct effects of the Getting Ready
intervention on the SCBE Social Competence scale
appear to have - been masked by the language spoken by the child
and the childs disability status. For this
variable, there is a - significant interaction between the
intervention and child language, and between the
intervention and - disability status. Intervention effects are
noted only when these child factors are taken
into account. - There were also some significant interactions
observed with family risk as a moderator.
However, no clear - patterns were evident.
METHODS
RESULTS
Table 2
Table 1 Participant Characteristics at Baseline
Effect Estimate SE DF t p-value ES
DECA Initiative
Intercept (C) 50.83 0.98 218.62 51.90 lt0.01
Condition (?E-C) -1.50 1.32 213.83 -1.13 0.26
Time (C) 0.59 0.07 167.85 8.81 lt0.01
Cond. X Time (?E-C) 0.19 0.09 156.41 2.12 0.04 0.56
DECA Attachment
Intercept (C) 52.67 1.01 219.99 51.98 lt0.01
Condition (?E-C) -1.99 1.37 214.53 -1.46 0.15
Time (C) 0.26 0.08 172.80 3.35 lt0.01
Cond. X Time (?E-C) 0.29 0.10 160.30 2.88 0.00 0.75
SCBE Anxiety Withdrawal SCBE Anxiety Withdrawal
Intercept (C) 1.94 0.07 217.06 26.29 lt0.01
Condition (?E-C) 0.08 0.10 211.35 0.77 0.44
Time (C) -0.01 0.01 174.13 -1.21 0.23
Cond. X Time (?E-C) -0.02 0.01 160.86 -2.91 lt0.01 -0.74
SCBE Social Competence SCBE Social Competence
Intercept (C) 3.65 0.09 219.80 39.72 lt0.01
Condition (?E-C) -0.10 0.12 213.94 -0.78 0.44
Time (C) 0.06 0.01 166.28 9.91 lt0.01
Cond. X Time (?E-C) 0.00 0.01 152.36 0.58 0.57 0.17
p lt .05 p lt .01
C Control Group E Experimental Group C Control Group E Experimental Group C Control Group E Experimental Group C Control Group E Experimental Group C Control Group E Experimental Group C Control Group E Experimental Group C Control Group E Experimental Group
Children (n220) Parents (n214) Teachers (n29)
Mean Age M43.06 months (SD3.55 months) M29.35 years (SD7.71 years) M36.05 years (SD 11 years)
Gender 51 Male 95 Female 100 Female
Ethnicity 30 White 25 Hispanic/Latino 18 African-American 25 Other 47 White 26 Hispanic/Latino 16 African-American 11 Other 91 White 9 Hispanic/Latino
Language 92 English 8 Other
Disability 88 no disability 12 identified disability 88 no disability 12 identified disability
Public assistance 98 public assistance 2 no public assistance
Employment status 54 employed 46 unemployed
Age at childs birth 36 under 18 years old 64 over 18 years old
Education 23 less than high school 77 high school diploma or more 23 less than high school 77 high school diploma or more
Adults in household 40 single parents 60 two adults in home 40 single parents 60 two adults in home
Note. Six parents did not provide demographic information at the baseline measurement. Note. Six parents did not provide demographic information at the baseline measurement. Note. Six parents did not provide demographic information at the baseline measurement. Note. Six parents did not provide demographic information at the baseline measurement.
- LIMITATIONS
- Child outcomes were assessed via teacher report
only and multiple reports of child outcomes
across home - and preschool settings are needed to gauge
effects of the intervention objectively across
contexts. - The treatment group showed significantly higher
levels of risk than the control group, which may
have - presented problems in estimating the
possibility of family risk as a moderator of the
intervention effects. - There is a need to investigate family risk more
extensively to understand its effects in the
context of the - Getting Ready intervention.
- Lack of follow-up data on children are available
as they transitioned to kindergarten. - IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE RESEARCH DIRECTIONS
- This study illustrates the importance of an
ecological, relationship-based approach to early
intervention for - children who enter school with higher risk,
including children in low socioeconomic
conditions who speak a - language other than English and children with
disabilities. - Variables that potentially mediate intervention
effects on child outcomes need to be explored. - Teacher variables that potentially moderate
intervention effects, such as stress, beliefs
regarding parental - roles, and agency support, need to be explored.
- The long-term effects of the Getting Ready
intervention on child interpersonal competencies
beyond the - preschool period also need to be examined.
The research was supported by a grant awarded to
Drs. Susan Sheridan and Carolyn Pope Edwards by
the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
National Institute of Child Health and Human
Development, Administration for Children and
Families, and Office of the Assistant Secretary
for Planning and Evaluation and by of Education
Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative
Services (Grant 1R01H0043613the U.S. Department
5).