Efficacy Trial of the Kids in Transition to School (KITS) Program for Children With Developmental Disabilities and Behavioral Problems
NCT ID: NCT01593189
Last Updated: 2015-10-15
Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
209 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2008-04-30
2013-03-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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Setting: The setting for the intervention will be playgroups and parent support groups conducted in center-based classrooms during the summer before and the first 2 months of kindergarten.
Population: This study involves the recruitment of 200 children with co-occurring developmental disabilities and behavioral problems who are entering kindergarten in the fall (four yearly cohorts of 50 children each). The children will be recruited from the Lane County, Oregon, public agency responsible for early childhood special education services.
Intervention: KITS is a short-term, intensive program timed to occur during the transition to kindergarten-a critical developmental milestone with far-reaching effects on school outcomes. The KITS curriculum focuses on the social-emotional and early literacy skills shown to be essential for success in kindergarten and on contextual characteristics (i.e., parent involvement in early literacy and positive parenting) to support and promote these skills. KITS features 24 curriculum-based school readiness playgroups to facilitate the development of self-regulatory, social, and early literacy skills (twice weekly in the summer before kindergarten and once weekly September-October) and 7 psychoeducational parent groups focused on parent involvement in early literacy and positive parenting practices (every 2 weeks June-October).
Research Design and Methods: Children will be randomly assigned to the KITS intervention condition or a services-as-usual comparison group and assessed at four intervals: spring prior to kindergarten, immediately prior to kindergarten entry, kindergarten fall, and kindergarten spring. One hundred fifty of the children will also be assessed in the spring of first grade. KITS children will receive the intervention as described above.
Control condition: Children in the comparison group will receive any ECSE or other services that they would typically receive. These will be assessed at each data collection point.
Key measures: Multimethod, multiagent outcome measures will include the following: direct assessments of the child's social-emotional and early literacy skills prior to kindergarten and social-emotional functioning and literacy skills during kindergarten and first grade; parent and teacher reports on children's characteristics, parent involvement in early literacy and school, and parenting practices; and direct classroom observations of children's academic engaged time and social behaviors during unstructured school time.
Data-analytic strategies: Analyses will employ variable-based (e.g., ANOVA and regression) and person-based (e.g., latent growth curve modeling) approaches. SEM will be used to test how changes in hypothesized mediators affect outcomes and how outcomes vary depending on level of hypothesized moderators.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
PREVENTION
SINGLE
Study Groups
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KITS Program
The KITS intervention consists of: (a) child school readiness play groups to facilitate the development of self-regulatory, social, and early literacy skills (2 times per week in summer, 1 times per week in the fall); and (b) a bi-monthly psychoeducational support group to promote parent involvement in the child's early literacy and schooling and the use of effective parenting techniques
KITS Program
This is a 4-month psychosocial intervention for children with developmental disabilities and behavior problems who are entering kindergarten and their caregivers. The intervention begins in the summer before kindergarten. The KITS intervention consists of: (a) child school readiness play groups to facilitate the development of self-regulatory, social, and early literacy skills (2 times per week in summer, 1 times per week in the fall); and (b) a bi-monthly psychoeducational support group to promote parent involvement in the child's early literacy and schooling and the use of effective parenting techniques
Services as usual
Families continued to receive any services that they had been receiving in the community.
No interventions assigned to this group
Interventions
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KITS Program
This is a 4-month psychosocial intervention for children with developmental disabilities and behavior problems who are entering kindergarten and their caregivers. The intervention begins in the summer before kindergarten. The KITS intervention consists of: (a) child school readiness play groups to facilitate the development of self-regulatory, social, and early literacy skills (2 times per week in summer, 1 times per week in the fall); and (b) a bi-monthly psychoeducational support group to promote parent involvement in the child's early literacy and schooling and the use of effective parenting techniques
Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Judged to have behavioral problems that would interfere with the transition to kindergarten
* Entering kindergarten in the fall of the year in which recruited into the study
Exclusion Criteria
* Severe visual, hearing or physical impairment that would prevent the child from completing the assessment tasks or participating in the intervention
4 Years
6 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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U.S. Department of Education
FED
Oregon Social Learning Center
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Katherine C. Pears
Research Scientist
Locations
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Oregon Social Learning Center
Eugene, Oregon, United States
Countries
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References
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Pears KC, Fisher PA, Heywood CV, Bronz KD. Promoting school readiness in foster children. In: Saracho ON, Spodek B, eds. Contemporary Perspectives on Social Learning in Early Childhood Education Greenwich, CT: Information Age Publishing; 2007:173-198.
Pears KC, Kim HK, Healey CV, Yoerger K, Fisher PA. Improving child self-regulation and parenting in families of pre-kindergarten children with developmental disabilities and behavioral difficulties. Prev Sci. 2015 Feb;16(2):222-32. doi: 10.1007/s11121-014-0482-2.
Related Links
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Oregon Social Learning Center web site
Other Identifiers
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R324A080026
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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