Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis
Indicators of quality early intensive behavioral intervention (EIBI) include comprehensive interventions, adequately trained staff, high rates of effective instruction delivery, happy interactions between children and their teachers, and socially valid outcomes. When these are in place, high quality...
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University of North Texas
2019
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ndltd-unt.edu-info-ark-67531-metadc15052142021-07-09T05:22:38Z Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis Weir, Jade R Behavior Analysis Early Intensive Behavior Intervention Autism Applied Behavior Analysis Teaching Interactions Child Initiations Teacher Initiations Positive Affect Engagement Learn Units Effective Teaching Teaching Opportunities Methodological Social Validity Socially Valid Outcomes Stakeholders Survey Responsiveness Autism in children -- Treatment -- Evaluation. Autistic children -- Education -- Evaluation. Indicators of quality early intensive behavioral intervention (EIBI) include comprehensive interventions, adequately trained staff, high rates of effective instruction delivery, happy interactions between children and their teachers, and socially valid outcomes. When these are in place, high quality EIBI is more likely to increase progress that children with autism make during treatment. When not in place, progress is not as likely, as rapid, or as meaningful. To date, there is limited research regarding the correlation between these indicators of high-quality EIBI and the degree to which their effects are meaningful to direct consumers. The purpose of this methodological study was to compare direct, quantitative measures of teaching interactions (child initiations, teacher initiations, child affect, teacher affect) with qualitative measures (stakeholder ratings of teacher effectiveness, amount of opportunities for interaction and interest in the child) of teaching interactions to determine what sets the occasion for expert stakeholders to describe a teaching interaction as effective, quality therapy. University of North Texas Ala'i-Rosales, Shahla Rosales-Ruiz, Jesus Leaf, Justin B Cihon, Joseph H 2019-05 Thesis or Dissertation vi, 59 pages Text local-cont-no: submission_1447 https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1505214/ ark: ark:/67531/metadc1505214 English Public Weir, Jade R Copyright Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved. |
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English |
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topic |
Behavior Analysis Early Intensive Behavior Intervention Autism Applied Behavior Analysis Teaching Interactions Child Initiations Teacher Initiations Positive Affect Engagement Learn Units Effective Teaching Teaching Opportunities Methodological Social Validity Socially Valid Outcomes Stakeholders Survey Responsiveness Autism in children -- Treatment -- Evaluation. Autistic children -- Education -- Evaluation. |
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Behavior Analysis Early Intensive Behavior Intervention Autism Applied Behavior Analysis Teaching Interactions Child Initiations Teacher Initiations Positive Affect Engagement Learn Units Effective Teaching Teaching Opportunities Methodological Social Validity Socially Valid Outcomes Stakeholders Survey Responsiveness Autism in children -- Treatment -- Evaluation. Autistic children -- Education -- Evaluation. Weir, Jade R Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis |
description |
Indicators of quality early intensive behavioral intervention (EIBI) include comprehensive interventions, adequately trained staff, high rates of effective instruction delivery, happy interactions between children and their teachers, and socially valid outcomes. When these are in place, high quality EIBI is more likely to increase progress that children with autism make during treatment. When not in place, progress is not as likely, as rapid, or as meaningful. To date, there is limited research regarding the correlation between these indicators of high-quality EIBI and the degree to which their effects are meaningful to direct consumers. The purpose of this methodological study was to compare direct, quantitative measures of teaching interactions (child initiations, teacher initiations, child affect, teacher affect) with qualitative measures (stakeholder ratings of teacher effectiveness, amount of opportunities for interaction and interest in the child) of teaching interactions to determine what sets the occasion for expert stakeholders to describe a teaching interaction as effective, quality therapy. |
author2 |
Ala'i-Rosales, Shahla |
author_facet |
Ala'i-Rosales, Shahla Weir, Jade R |
author |
Weir, Jade R |
author_sort |
Weir, Jade R |
title |
Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis |
title_short |
Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis |
title_full |
Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis |
title_fullStr |
Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Looking for Quantitative and Qualitative Measures of Teaching Interactions: A Preliminary Analysis |
title_sort |
looking for quantitative and qualitative measures of teaching interactions: a preliminary analysis |
publisher |
University of North Texas |
publishDate |
2019 |
url |
https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc1505214/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT weirjader lookingforquantitativeandqualitativemeasuresofteachinginteractionsapreliminaryanalysis |
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1719416374337470464 |