Susan M. Sheridan, PhD - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Susan M. Sheridan, PhD

Description:

Collaborative Problem-Solving Among Families and Schools: Effects of Conjoint Behavioral Consultation on Student Behaviors and Parent-Teacher Relationships – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:155
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 38
Provided by: SueSheri1
Learn more at: https://cyfs.unl.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Susan M. Sheridan, PhD


1
Collaborative Problem-Solving Among Families and
SchoolsEffects of Conjoint Behavioral
Consultation on Student Behaviors and
Parent-Teacher Relationships
  • Susan M. Sheridan, PhD
  • Nebraska Center for Research on Children, Youth,
    Families Schools
  • Presented at the Annual Meeting of the
    International School Psychology Association,
  • Dublin, Ireland. July, 2010

2
Why Family-School Partnerships?
  • The evidence is consistent, positive, and
    convincing families have a major influence on
    their childrens achievement in school and
    through life The research continues to grow and
    build an ever-strengthening case. When schools,
    families, and community groups work together to
    support learning, children tend to do better in
    school, stay in school longer, and like school
    more. (Henderson Mapp, 2002)

3
Conjoint Behavioral Consultation
  • Promotes and supports home-school partnerships
    in the context of cooperative and collegial
    problem-solving
  • Emphasizes meaningful parental/family engagement
    in education
  • A vehicle by which to foster constructive, goal
    directed, solution-oriented services for children
  • An extension of traditional (teacher)
    consultation that goes beyond the school setting
    and brings parents into the intervention and
    decision making process

4
Conjoint Behavioral ConsultationA Definition
  • A strength-based problem-solving and
    decision-making model wherein parents, teachers,
    and other caregivers or service providers work as
    partners and share responsibility for promoting
    positive and consistent outcomes related to a
    childs academic, behavioral, and
    social-emotional development (Sheridan
    Kratochwill, 2008, p. 25).
  • All stages of consultation (from problem
    identification to plan evaluation) are conducted
    with parents and teachers together, in a
    collaborative manner.

5
Stages of Conjoint Behavioral Consultation
  • Problem/Needs Identification
  • Identify child strengths concerns
  • Specify a target for intervention (i.e., what
    behavior is present or lacking that precludes a
    childs full capacity to learn?)
  • Problem/Needs Analysis
  • Review baseline data
  • Determine conditions that contribute to the
    problem (e.g., skill deficits or environmental
    events) or function the behavior is serving
    (e.g., attention, escape)

See http//fsp.unl.edu/future_module3.html
6
Stages of Conjoint Behavioral Consultation
  • Plan Implementation
  • Co-create meaningful intervention plan across
    home and school
  • Ensure parent and teacher skill development via
    training and support of treatment plan
    implementation
  • Plan Evaluation
  • Evaluate childs progress toward co-established
    goals
  • Modify intervention plans as necessary
  • Plan for ongoing success and partnering

See http//fsp.unl.edu/future_module3.html
7
CBC Outcome Goals
  • Address students learning, behavioral, and/or
    social-emotional needs over extended time
    (temporal) and place (context)
  • Establish consistent programming and encourage
    continuity across settings
  • Monitor effects (and side effects) of
    interventions systematically across settings
  • Improve skills and knowledge of all parties
  • Enhance generalization and maintenance of
    treatment effects

8
CBC Relational Goals
  • Establish and strengthen home-school
    relationships and partnerships
  • Improve communication and knowledge about the
    child, family, and classroom
  • Promote shared ownership for students learning
  • Encourage parents to establish positive beliefs
    about their role in in their childs learning
  • Facilitate teachers perceptions about the
    benefits of parent involvement

9
Video Example
10
Research Support(see Sheridan, Clarke, Burt,
2008)
  • CBC has been found to be effective for
    behavioral, academic, and social-emotional
    concerns (Guli, 2005 Sheridan, Eagle, Cowan,
    Mickelson, 2001), across unique contexts.
  • Efficacy research to date has relied on small-n
    experimental and replication studies.
  • Design limitations precluded inferences about
    generalizability and information about how CBC
    works to produce effects.

11
Current Research CBC in the Early Grades
  • A 4-cohort randomized trial testing the efficacy
    of CBC funded by the Institute of Education
    Sciences
  • Research questions
  • 1. What is the effect of CBC on childrens
    disruptive behaviors at school and home?
  • 2. What is the effect of CBC on parent
    participation in problem solving?
  • 3. What is the effect of CBC on the
    parent-teacher relationship, and teachers
    beliefs about parent involvement?
  • 4. What accounts for CBCs effects? What is the
    pathway through which it exerts its effects?

12
Participants Data Collection
  • 207 K-3 students and their parents and teachers
    from 21 schools participated over 4 years
  • 82 classrooms were randomly assigned to treatment
    or control conditions
  • Students with disruptive classroom behaviors
    (e.g., non-compliance, aggression) were selected
    based on teacher nomination, ratings on a short
    behavioral inventory, and the Systematic
    Screening for Behavior Disorders (SSBD Walker
    Seversen, 1990)
  • Assessments conducted at baseline and post-CBC
    follow up assessments conducted in the following
    academic year

13
Select Measures
  • Direct Classroom Behaviors
  • Parent Daily Report (Chamberlain Reid, 1987)
  • Behavioral Assessment Scale for Children
    (Reynolds Kamphaus, 2004)
  • Social Skills Rating System (Gresham Elliott,
    1990)
  • Parent Participation in Problem Solving
    (Sheridan, 2003)
  • Parent-Teacher Rating Scale-II (Vickers Minke,
    1995)
  • Teacher Beliefs about Parent Involvement
    (Hoover-Dempsey et al. 1992, 2002)

14
CBC Implementation
  • 4 to 5 conjoint consultation sessions occurred
    over 8 to 12 weeks in small groups with parents
    of 2 to 3 students and the classroom teacher

Noncompliance (e.g., work refusal) Disengaged (e.g., off task) Interference (e.g., shout outs) Aggression (e.g., hitting peer)
Home 41 24 32 2
School 22 40 35 3
Represents percentage of cases that targeted
certain types/categories of behaviors.
15
Evidence-Based Interventions
  • Home-School Notes (or equivalent)
  • 100 of cases
  • Positive Consequences
  • Approx 97 of cases
  • Examples
  • Grab Bag of Rewards
  • Catch Being Good
  • Preventive Technique
  • Approx 61 of cases
  • Examples
  • Activity Checklists
  • Seating Arrangement
  • Skill Building
  • Approx 35 of cases
  • Examples
  • Social Skills Training
  • Self Monitoring
  • Reductive Consequences
  • Approx 12 of cases
  • Examples
  • Response Cost
  • Time Out

16
Data Analyses
  • Effect of CBC on child outcomes and
    parent/teacher relationships
  • 3-level multilevel model (time points within
    individuals within teachers) examining the fixed
    effect of time by treatment interaction (?)
  • Randomization occurred at the level of the
    teacher
  • Mediating effect of the parent-teacher
    relationship was tested
  • Path analysis with a bootstrap method (Preacher,
    Zyphur Zhang, in press)

17
Student Effects at School
  • Relative to a control group, CBC produced
    significant improvements in observations of
  • Engaged time in the classroom t(144.9) 2.23 p
    lt .05
  • Nonphysical aggression t(199.9) -2.31 p lt .05)
  • Physical aggression t(248.4) -1.61 p .10)
  • Relative to a control group, CBC produced
    significant improvements in teacher reported
  • Externalizing problems (?-2.60 t(162)-1.98 p
    lt .05 ES -.34)
  • Adaptive skills (?1.99 t(158)1.99 p lt .05 ES
    .47)
  • Social skills (?3.66 t(164)2.40 p lt .05 ES
    .44)

18
Teacher Reported Externalizing Behaviors
19
Teacher Reported Adaptive Skills
20
Teacher Reported Social Skills
21
Student Effects at Home
  • Relative to a control group, CBC produced
    significant improvements in
  • Total Problem Behaviors, t(100.4) -2.07, p lt
    .05
  • Follow-up analyses of PDR found significant
    improvements in
  • Defiance, t(175.5) -2.26, p lt .05
  • Noncompliance, t(177.4) -2.82, p lt .05
  • Teasing, t(220.8) -2.64, p lt .05
  • Arguing, t(189.6) -2.31, p lt .05

22
Total Problems Home
Control
CBC
23
Noncompliance Home
Control
CBC
24
Defiance Home
CBC
25
Arguing Home
CBC
26
Current Research Findings Parents
  • Relative to control parents, those who
    participated in CBC reported to increase their
  • active participation in educational problem
    solving (?.556 t(87.84)3.83 p lt .001)

27
Parent Participation in Problem Solving
CBC
Control
28
Current Research Findings Teachers
  • Relative to control teachers, positive outcomes
    for CBC teachers include
  • better overall relationship with parents (?.16
    t(174)2.53 p lt.01 ES .55)
  • more positive beliefs about parental involvement
    (? .271 t(74.91)2.94 p lt.01)

29
Parent-Teacher Relationship (Teacher)
Control
30
Teacher Beliefs about Parent Involvement
31
Mediation What Accounts for the Effects?
  • Investigated whether the parent-teacher
    relationship mediates (accounts for) CBCs
    effects.
  • The parent-teacher relationship accounted for the
    positive CBC effect on childrens
  • Increased adaptive skills (p lt .05)
  • Increased social skills (p lt .05)
  • Decreased externalizing behaviors (marginal p
    .053)

32
Mediation Parent-Teacher Relationship
Parent-Teacher Relationship
S.18 A.18 E.18
S.21 A.20 E-.18
CBC
Social Adaptive Externalizing
S.11 A.09 E-.17
The parent-teacher relationship mediates the
effects of CBC on child behaviors
33
Discussion of Findings
  • CBC produces important outcomes for all parties
  • Significant improvements in child behavior
  • Significant improvement in parent participation
    home-school communication
  • Significant improvement in teacher beliefs
    teacher-parent relationships

34
Discussion of Findings
  • CBC seems to have its effects through the
    parent-teacher relationship
  • Points to the importance of attending to the
    parent-teacher relationship within the context of
    ongoing CBC practice
  • Reinforces belief in the mesosystem as
    significant to a childs healthy functioning

35
Ongoing Research
  • Still investigating outcomes as assessed via
    direct observations in classrooms (via HLM)
  • Still investigating other mediators, such as
    implementation fidelity, parent/teacher
    engagement, and continuity across home and school
  • Exploring measurement issues associated with
    fidelity (see Sheridan et al., 2009 SPR)
  • Exploring conceptual and empirical issues related
    to engagement and continuity

36
Ongoing Research
  • Need to investigate moderation under what
    conditions can we expect CBC to have its greatest
    effect?
  • Investigating moderators such as target behavior,
    student disability status/special education
    services
  • Follow up data collection still underway
  • Will answer questions regarding maintenance of
    effects
  • Need to determine application and efficacy in the
    context of authentic practice
  • Need to explore efficacy with other behaviors
    (e.g., academic) and in other settings (e.g.,
    rural)

37
Thank You!!
  • For more information or correspondence
  • Susan M. Sheridan, Ph.D.
  • George Holmes University Professor of Educational
    Psychology
  • Nebraska Center for Research on Children, Youth,
    Families and Schools
  • 216 Mabel Lee Hall
  • University of Nebraska-Lincoln
  • Lincoln, NE 68588-0235
  • ssheridan2_at_unl.edu

Research funded by IES Grant R305F050284
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com