1 / 37

Generalization of Learned Objectives from Project DATA to the Integrated Preschool Classroom

Generalization of Learned Objectives from Project DATA to the Integrated Preschool Classroom. Shannon Crissey, M.Ed. Erin Greager, M.Ed. Lisa Pitale, M.Ed, BCBA University of Washington Haring Center Experimental Education Unit. Introduction. Who are we?

matsu
Download Presentation

Generalization of Learned Objectives from Project DATA to the Integrated Preschool Classroom

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Generalization of Learned Objectives from Project DATA to the Integrated Preschool Classroom Shannon Crissey, M.Ed. Erin Greager, M.Ed. Lisa Pitale, M.Ed, BCBA University of Washington Haring Center Experimental Education Unit

  2. Introduction • Who are we? • Shannon Crissey, M.Ed. – EEU Preschool Teacher • Erin Greager, M.Ed. – EEU Project DATA teacher • Lisa Pitale, M.Ed., BCBA – EEU Project DATA teacher • Who are you? • What population do you work with? • How is inclusion addressed at your place of work?

  3. Why are we presenting today? We are presenting today because of our strong belief in inclusion and inclusive practices. Questions we strived to answer this school year as special education teachers: - Why inclusion? - How can we turn a lot of “talk” into some “action”? - Does this action actually work? And if not, how can we MAKE it work?

  4. Why inclusion? • Arguments for inclusion: • Research articles: • Where There’s a Will, There’s a Way: The Successful Inclusion of a Child with Autism. By Janet Schmidt • Inclusion in Play: A Case Study of a Child with Autism in an Inclusive Nursery. By Fani Theodorou and Melanie Nind • Inclusion Means Everyone! The Role of the Early Childhood Educator when Including Young Children with Autism in the Classroom. By Shernavaz Vakil, Evonn Welton, Barbara O’Connor and Lynn S Kline. • Promoting a Lifetime of Inclusion. By Adelle Rezaglia, Meagan Karvonen, Erik Drasgow and Craig C Stoxen. • Inclusive Programming for Students with Autism. By Belinda W. Crisman

  5. Civil rights: • “Disability need not be an obstacle to success … It is my hope that … this century will mark a turning point for inclusion of people with disabilities in the lives of their societies.” – Professor Stephen Hawking • “We know that equality of individual ability has never existed and never will, but we do insist that equality of opportunity still must be sought." - Franklin D. Roosevelt • “Inclusive education means that children will be included, made to feel valued and provide others with the opportunity to appreciate those who are different from themselves.” – Jeffrey Rudski, Professor of Psychology, Muhlenberg College

  6. So what’s the challenge? • Why is inclusion not happening on so many levels? • Staffing • Students’ behavior • General education classroom too disruptive of an environment for child to learn in • What are the challenges happening in your school?

  7. So what can we do about it? • This is where our project comes in. We wanted to show that if students needed a self-contained environment in order to learn classroom skills they could then generalize those skills to a more natural environment.

  8. Purpose • The purpose of our project was to determine whether students were able to generalize mastered objectives from the Project DATA classroom to the integrated pre-school classroom - but….why?

  9. Participants • Students between the ages of 3-5 who have an Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) diagnosis. • Students’ ability levels varied from mainly social-emotional delays to more global delays in communication, cognition, behavior, and social development.

  10. Technical and Social Support for Families Integrated Early Childhood Experience Collaboration and Coordination Quality of Life Influenced Curriculum Setting: DATA Project Extended, Intensive Instruction

  11. Extended, Intensive Instructional Time • Instructional strategies are data-based and cross-disciplinary • Children’s need for support is matched to the type of instruction • Teaching procedures include discrete trials, naturalistic teaching techniques, response prompting strategies and visual supports • One-on-one and small groups

  12. Technical and Social Support for Families • Emphasis on family-child relationships • Home based services offered • Emphasis on building supportive communities for families • “Families own the agenda”

  13. “Quality of Life” Curriculum in the following areas: • Attending • Imitation • Communication • Play • Social interaction • Matching • Adaptive skills • Focus on environment, child interest and motivation, and functional skills. • Focus on children’s ability to access typical environments.

  14. Collaboration and CoordinationAcross Services • Increase consistency across environments • Appropriate expectations across environments • Increase opportunities to practice skills • Share information about motivation and progress • Regular meetings among teachers • Meetings, visits, and email with other related services

  15. Project DATA Schedule

  16. Setting – Integrated Preschool • Integrated Preschool Classroom • 8 children diagnosed with a disability • 8 children who are typically developing • Typically a 1:3 teacher/student ratio • General education curriculum modified to meet the needs of diverse learners through adaptations, accommodations, embedded learning, and the use of peer models, along with other strategies.

  17. Setting – Preschool Schedule

  18. Procedure – Initial Steps • Objective initially taught in Project DATA classroom • 1:2 teacher/student ratio • Principles of applied behavior analysis • Limited distractions • Discrete trials or embedded learning with peer

  19. Procedure - Criterion • Objective closed: 80% proficiency across 2 consecutive days • Communication between Project DATA staff and integrated preschool team to discuss what each objective looked like and how it was to be tested within the integrated preschool setting.

  20. Procedure – Tested in preschool classroom • Delivered in the context of the preschool classroom within naturally occurring activities. • Testing was delivered by the researcher who lowered her body to the child’s level, gained eye contact, lessened distracters as much as possible, and delivered a clear, concise probe.

  21. Data Collection • Criteria for chosen objectives • Discreteness • Extent to which they were natural preschool behaviors • (ie: object imitation, following directions, etc.)

  22. Data Collection • Objectives were tested for generalization during specified “generalization check” weeks after the objective closed in Project DATA. • Data were collected using whatever data collection system was already established within the preschool classroom (clipboards, index cards attached to ring on teacher’s waist, etc). • + for independently demonstrating behavior • - for no response or incorrect response • Each testing probe given five times; child scored either 20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, or 100% per objective

  23. General timeline of project • September: met with all preschool and Project DATA teachers to explain the project and determine who the “classroom facilitators” would be. • Facilitators were classroom assistants who were in charge of administering generalization trials within their classrooms and collecting data on each child’s response.

  24. Timeline (con’t) • October: First generalization check took place. Project DATA teachers recorded mastered objectives in classroom binders. Facilitators transferred objectives on to classroom data sheets and tested for generalization that week. • December: Second generalization check took place

  25. Timeline (con’t) • January: Researchers met with facilitators to discuss project thus far and correct any changes necessary. • February: Third generalization check took place

  26. Timeline (con’t) • Early March: Researchers met to discuss aspects of project that were successful vs. not successful and what possible reasons might be. • Solutions discussed and changes made accordingly • Late March: Fourth generalization check took place.

  27. Here’s what it looked like! • Video of objective being taught in Project DATA classroom • Video of objective being tested in preschool classroom

  28. Discussion • What are elements that seem feasible in your classroom/center? • Are there any elements that would not work? Why? How could you problem solve this?

  29. Now for the fun part…

  30. Results

  31. Results – High Functioning

  32. Results – Low Functioning

  33. Results Discussion • Data interpretation • Students overall generalized at an average rate of 68% • High-functioning students generalized at an average rate of 74% • Low-functioning students generalized at an average rate of 61%

  34. Project Discussion • What was successful about the project? • Unforeseen challenges?

  35. Discussion (con’t) . • External vs. natural settings should be as similar as possible (including how testing trials are delivered) • Some students showed lower levels of generalization • Children with more severe forms of ASD may not generalize as well

  36. Discussion (con’t) • Problems: If buy-in is not there then generalization may not happen with consistency or fidelity. • Discussion: How to promote buy-in for generalization and inclusion? • How will this continue to inform our future practice? • How does this relate to the current state of special education? Is it feasible?

  37. Thank you! Questions? Please email us with any additional questions! Shannon Crissey – connors8@u.washington.edu Erin Greager – bryce12@gmail.com Lisa Pitale – lapitale@u.washington.edu

More Related