Increasing Peer-Directed Social-Communication Skills of Children Enrolled in Head Start

Author:

Craig-Unkefer Lesley A.1,Kaiser Ann P.2

Affiliation:

1. University of Minnesota, craig039@ umn.edu

2. Vanderbilt University

Abstract

The current study assessed the effects of an intervention to improve the social-communicative interactions of six children at-risk for delays in language and social skills enrolled in Head Start. A multiple-baseline design across three mixed-gender dyads was used to determine the effects of a three-component intervention on children's verbal interactions and play. During the baseline, intervention, and generalization phases, children's social-communicative behaviors were videotaped, coded, and summarized. When the plan-play-report intervention was introduced in each dyad, children's social-communicative behaviors increased. Increases occurred in descriptive statements, requests, and language complexity and diversity. During the intervention, children also engaged in more complex play behaviors. Children generalized changes in social communication, interaction, and play to untrained peers from different classrooms.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

Reference43 articles.

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2. The Social Strategy Rating Scale

3. Bricker, D. (1993). Then, now, and the path between: A brief history of language intervention. In A. P Kaiser & D. B. Gray (Eds.), Enhancing children's communication: Research foundations for intervention (Vol. 2, pp. 11-34). Baltimore: Brookes.

4. Effects of group socialization procedures on the social interactions of preschool children

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