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Effects of a School-Wide SACD Intervention on Children with Disruptive Behavior Problems William E. Pelham, Jr., Greta M. Massetti, & Daniel A. Waschbusch University at Buffalo, SUNY Presentation at the 2005 SRCD Conference, Atlanta
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Background: Violence and Aggression NCLB legislates use of evidence-based programs in violence prevention and character education Little scientific evidence on effective practices for 1. Building character and social competence, and 2. Reducing violence, disruptive behavior, and aggression
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Disruptive Behavior Problems Most common referral for Mental Health services Referrals to Special Education Burden on resources Area of concern for classroom teachers Impairment for classroom settings (disruption, aggression, interferes with learning)
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Disruptive Behavior: Domains of Interest Behavioral domains Aggression Bullying Noncompliance/defiance Classroom disruption Psychiatric diagnoses ADHD ODD CD/Conduct problems/Delinquency
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Rates of Behavior Problems in School Settings Behavior problems/disruptive behaviors: higher prevalence Varies by school district Lower rates for psychiatric diagnoses
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Prevalence of Disruptive Behavior Disorders Prevalence: 3-5% for APA Most epidemiological studies report higher rates (6-16%) Teacher survey: nationally representative sample (Fabiano et al., 2004) 6% identified as ADHD in elementary school setting Additional 6% teachers rated as not identified Lower rates for middle school
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Refractory Nature of Disruptive Behavior Strongest predictors of poor outcomes in adolescence: Behavior problems Poor academic achievement 2/3 of children with disruptive behavior have moderate to poor outcomes
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Social Competence Ecological and social validity Stability of problems with DB and antisocial, aggressive behavior Social competence as protective factor Correlates of problems with social competence Negative outcomes of adolescence/adulthood
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Domains of Influence School contexts Peer relationships Parent-child relationships
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Social Skills Interventions for Children with DB Problems Data on positive short-term effects Problems: Long-term effectiveness Generalizability Magnitude of effects At-risk and identified children Interventions must be comprehensive and target multiple areas of functioning
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Key Principles of Intervention for Disruptive Behavior Disruptive/aggressive behaviors are chronic conditions Focus on functional impairment, deficient adaptive skills Focus on teaching skills to parents, teachers, and children Parenting skills Classroom management Behavioral control, social competencies, academic skills
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Key Principles Requires systems redesign (linking families, schools) Palatability and feasibility of interventions for families, teachers Early intervention is key Interventions need to be evidence-based
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Levels of Intervention in Comprehensive Programs Universal Targeted/At risk Indicated/Identified Rarely combined in programs Must be effective for both average child and higher-risk children
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Universal Prevention Programs Comprehensive coverage of population Consistency of implementation Teaches skills to non-problem children Target populations at risk BUT Often limited effects with highest-risk and identified children
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The Academic and Behavioral Competencies (ABC) Program: A School-Wide Intervention
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The ABC Program School-Wide program with multiple components Additional intervention for identified children Standard framework adapted at each school Training for all teachers on classroom management Behavioral consultants assigned to schools to facilitate implementation and coordinate behavioral consultation
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ABC Program Components: Universal Components School-wide behavior management Classroom management School-wide rules Consequences for rule following/violations: Daily Positive Notes, Fun Friday, Honor Roll, Time Out Homework components School-wide teacher-led social skills training School-wide peer tutoring for academic skills
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ABC Program Components: Targeted Components Individual consultation services Individualized programming After-school program Parent workshops
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Methodology 12 Schools: 8 Buffalo Public Schools (PK-8) 2 Charter schools (PK-9) 2 Suburban schools (K-5) Urban, high-risk populations Matched and randomly assigned
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Data Collection Two cohorts: 1st graders in year 1 (Younger cohort) 3rd graders in year 1 (Older cohort) Fall and Spring assessments for both cohorts Classroom observations: 3 per year per classroom Teacher, parent, and school measures
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Hypotheses and Research Question #1 Evaluate rates of behavior problems, and effect of intervention on identified behavior problems (e.g., ADHD, ODD)
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Measures for Question #1 Child psychopathology Evaluate effects of intervention on development, course of psychopathology Disruptive Behavior Disorder Rating Scale (Pelham et al., 1992) DB Problems as mediators Evaluate role of DB Problems (e.g., ADHD) in mediating outcomes Evaluate trajectories for highest risk children compared to non-problem children
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Hypotheses and Research Question #2 Evaluate the effects of the ABC Program: Children with Disruptive Behavior Problems
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Measures for Question #2: Child-level Effects Impairment/adaptive skills Evaluate effects of intervention for children with impaired daily life functioning Impairment Rating Scale (Fabiano et al., 1999) Peer functioning Peer acceptance/rejection for children with disruptive behavior Dishion Social Acceptance Scale (Dishion, 1990)
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Measures for Question #2: Child-level Effects Home functioning Evaluate the burden of care placed on parents of children with disruptive behavior problems Caregiver Strain Questionnaire (Brannan, Heflinger, & Bickman, 1992)
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Measures for Question #2: School-level Effects Discipline and behavior problems Evaluate influence of individual-level effects on school-level indicators School-level indicators: office referrals, suspensions, ISST referrals, truancy, rule violations (observations) Achievement Evaluate academic progress of children with Disruptive Behavior Problems
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Hypotheses and Research Question #3 Examine cohort effects: Younger cohort (G1-3) and Older cohort (G3-5), multiple years of intervention
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Procedure for Question #3 Developmental influences Comparison of Younger & Older cohorts on yearly outcome measures Evaluate effects of ABC Program on prevention of DB Problems in younger cohort Effects of multi-year intervention Comparison of Younger cohort in grade 3 to Older cohort in grade 3 Evaluate impact of ABC Program on trajectories and functioning for at-risk children
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Hypotheses and Research Question #4 Evaluate effects of intervention on use of mental health services and psychoactive medication
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Measures for Question #4 Special education Evaluate influence of intervention on referrals to special education services Mental health services & psychoactive medication Evaluate influence of intervention on use of medication, MH service usage
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Hypotheses and Research Question #5 Evaluate potential mediators and moderators to effects of intervention
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Measures for Question #5 Child functioning Aggression/bullying, impairment, psychopathology School climate Neighborhood/community factors Risk factors, crime, delinquency Program fidelity Classroom observations, ratings
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Progress, Problems, and Prospects Challenges School selection/recruitment Fidelity of implementation School perception of intervention Data collection burden Currently: Year 1 2 new schools in Sept. 3-year intervention, follow-up
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THANK YOU Contact Information Greta Massetti gmm23@buffalo.edu William Pelham pelham@buffalo.edu http://Wings.buffalo.edu/adhd/
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