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Universal Teacher-Child Interaction Training in early childhood special education: Identifying mechanisms of action that explain why it works.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Rothenberg, WA; Schmidt, E; Davidson, B; Garcia, D; Barnett, M; Fernandez, C; Mills, K; Jent, JF; Davis, E
Published in: Journal of school psychology
December 2024

Teacher-Child Interaction Training-Universal (TCIT-U) is effective for increasing teachers' use of strategies that promote positive child behavior; however, the exact mechanisms of change are unknown. Using a cluster randomized control trial in a sample of 410 racially- and ethnically-diverse children (Mage = 41.73 months; 50% White, 45% Black/African-American, 4% Multiracial, 1% Asian; 59% Hispanic; 87% with disabilities) taught by 102 teachers from 38 classrooms in eight schools, we attempted to identify these mechanisms of action. Results identified two mechanisms of action by which TCIT-U worked to benefit children in this sample. Enrollment in TCIT-U helped teachers learn to provide labeled praise for child behaviors (as measured by observer ratings) and appropriately follow through on commands (as measured by observer ratings) they issued, which subsequently caused children to experience better socioemotional functioning (as measured by on the teacher-reported Devereux Early Childhood Assessment) and fewer externalizing problems (as measured by the Sutter-Eyberg Student Behavior Inventory - Revised). Specifically, being in the TCIT-U intervention predicted more teacher use of labeled praise at post-treatment, which predicted lower child SESBI-Intensity scores at 1-month follow-up (Indirect Effect B = -1.97, SE = 0.73, p < .01). Additionally, being in the TCIT-U intervention predicted teacher follow-up on a greater proportion of direct commands post-treatment, which was associated with fewer student externalizing problem behaviors post-treatment (Indirect Effect B = -1.47, SE = 0.70, p = .04) and with higher student DECA Total Protective Factor scale scores post-treatment (Indirect Effect B = 3.72, SE = 1.63, p = .02). We discuss reasons why changing these two teacher behaviors might serve as mechanisms of change in our sample. Current findings reveal why TCIT-U might be effective as a universal prevention program that promotes socioemotional functioning and reduces externalizing behavior in racially- and ethnically-diverse samples of children with disabilities.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Journal of school psychology

DOI

EISSN

1873-3506

ISSN

0022-4405

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

107

Start / End Page

101392

Related Subject Headings

  • Teacher Training
  • Schools
  • School Teachers
  • Male
  • Interpersonal Relations
  • Humans
  • Female
  • Education, Special
  • Education
  • Child, Preschool
 

Citation

APA
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ICMJE
MLA
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Rothenberg, W. A., Schmidt, E., Davidson, B., Garcia, D., Barnett, M., Fernandez, C., … Davis, E. (2024). Universal Teacher-Child Interaction Training in early childhood special education: Identifying mechanisms of action that explain why it works. Journal of School Psychology, 107, 101392. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsp.2024.101392
Rothenberg, W Andrew, Ellyn Schmidt, Bridget Davidson, Dainelys Garcia, Miya Barnett, Corina Fernandez, Kaylen Mills, Jason F. Jent, and Eileen Davis. “Universal Teacher-Child Interaction Training in early childhood special education: Identifying mechanisms of action that explain why it works.Journal of School Psychology 107 (December 2024): 101392. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsp.2024.101392.
Rothenberg WA, Schmidt E, Davidson B, Garcia D, Barnett M, Fernandez C, et al. Universal Teacher-Child Interaction Training in early childhood special education: Identifying mechanisms of action that explain why it works. Journal of school psychology. 2024 Dec;107:101392.
Rothenberg, W. Andrew, et al. “Universal Teacher-Child Interaction Training in early childhood special education: Identifying mechanisms of action that explain why it works.Journal of School Psychology, vol. 107, Dec. 2024, p. 101392. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.jsp.2024.101392.
Rothenberg WA, Schmidt E, Davidson B, Garcia D, Barnett M, Fernandez C, Mills K, Jent JF, Davis E. Universal Teacher-Child Interaction Training in early childhood special education: Identifying mechanisms of action that explain why it works. Journal of school psychology. 2024 Dec;107:101392.
Journal cover image

Published In

Journal of school psychology

DOI

EISSN

1873-3506

ISSN

0022-4405

Publication Date

December 2024

Volume

107

Start / End Page

101392

Related Subject Headings

  • Teacher Training
  • Schools
  • School Teachers
  • Male
  • Interpersonal Relations
  • Humans
  • Female
  • Education, Special
  • Education
  • Child, Preschool