You'll learn to love it? Examining the relationship between intervention dose and acceptability among third-grade students

被引:0
作者
Eckert, Tanya L. [1 ]
Maguire, Samantha C. [1 ]
Nelson, Kaytlin A. [1 ]
Amidon, Siani Y. M. [1 ]
Goldstein, Alec R. [1 ]
Antoine, Monique S. [1 ]
Circe, Joshua J. [1 ]
Alderman, Sophia V. [1 ]
Young, Tyler J. [1 ]
机构
[1] Syracuse Univ, Dept Psychol, 430 Huntington Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244 USA
关键词
dosage; student acceptability; writing intervention; PERFORMANCE FEEDBACK; BEHAVIORAL INTERVENTIONS; TREATMENT INTEGRITY; SOCIAL VALIDITY; IMPLEMENTATION; FLUENCY; PROGRAM; CONSULTATION; PERCEPTIONS; PREVENTION;
D O I
10.1002/pits.23063
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
The acceptability of school-based interventions has been regularly examined among teachers and parents; however, students are less frequently assessed despite being the recipients of most interventions. Although recent studies have begun exploring how different student characteristics (e.g., gender) and types of acceptability assessments (e.g., dynamic) impact students' ratings, no studies have examined the role of intervention dosage despite early conceptual models highlighting the linkage between intervention acceptability, dosage, adherence, and effectiveness. This study explored 255 third-grade students' intervention dosage and acceptability ratings within the context of a class-wide writing intervention administered over 7 weeks. Results indicated that most students received a high number of intervention sessions throughout the study and rated the intervention as moderately acceptable. There was a statistically significant gender difference in students' postintervention acceptability ratings, with female students rating the class-wide writing intervention higher than male students. In addition, intervention dosage was a statistically significant predictor of students' postintervention acceptability ratings, although gender did not moderate these findings. Most students received the full intervention dosage or missed one intervention session, with female and male students having similar cumulative intervention doses.Students who received a greater amount of intervention dosage provided higher intervention acceptability ratings than students who received lower amounts of intervention dosages.Although female students rated the intervention higher than male students, these differing ratings were not associated with intervention dosage.
引用
收藏
页码:514 / 531
页数:18
相关论文
共 62 条
  • [51] Shapiro E.S., 2011, Academic skill problems: Direct assessment and intervention
  • [52] Acceptability assessment of school psychology interventions from 2005 to 2017
    Silva, Meghan R.
    Collier-Meek, Melissa A.
    Codding, Robin S.
    DeFouw, Emily R.
    [J]. PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS, 2020, 57 (01) : 62 - 77
  • [53] Pasteur's Quadrant as the Bridge Linking Rigor With Relevance
    Smith, Garnett J.
    Schmidt, Matthew M.
    Edelen-Smith, Patricia J.
    Cook, Bryan G.
    [J]. EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN, 2013, 79 (02) : 147 - 161
  • [54] Rigorous Assessment of Social Validity: A Scoping Review of a 40-Year Conversation
    Snodgrass, Melinda R.
    Chung, Moon Y.
    Kretzer, James M.
    Biggs, Elizabeth E.
    [J]. REMEDIAL AND SPECIAL EDUCATION, 2022, 43 (02) : 114 - 130
  • [55] Social validity in single-case research: A systematic literature review of prevalence and application
    Snodgrass, Melinda R.
    Chung, Moon Y.
    Meadan, Hedda
    Halle, James W.
    [J]. RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2018, 74 : 160 - 173
  • [56] Stipek Deborah., 1996, HDB ED PSYCHOL, P85
  • [57] Tabachnick B. G., 2007, USING MULTIVARIATE S, DOI DOI 10.1037/022267
  • [58] Outcomes in a randomised controlled trial of mathematics tutoring
    Topping, K. J.
    Miller, D.
    Murray, P.
    Henderson, S.
    Fortuna, C.
    Conlin, N.
    [J]. EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH, 2011, 53 (01) : 51 - 63
  • [59] Turco T.L., 1986, J PSYCHOEDUC ASSESS, V4, P281, DOI DOI 10.1177/073428298600400404
  • [60] Treatment acceptability of interventions published in six school psychology journals
    Villarreal, Victor
    Ponce, Christopher
    Gutierrez, Heveli
    [J]. SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGY INTERNATIONAL, 2015, 36 (03) : 322 - 332