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Skillstreaming and Social Skills Deficits in the Schools. By Laurie Stiga. Social Skills Deficits in the Schools.
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Skillstreaming and Social Skills Deficits in the Schools By Laurie Stiga
Social Skills Deficits in the Schools • Can the Skillstreaming program be implemented in the school setting to effectively assess and address the educational impact of reduced social skills in a reliable, organized and systematic way?
Is there a need to address social skills in the school setting?
Increased Number of Children with Reduced Social Skills • Environmental reasons – unemployment, family stress, divorce • Genetic and developmental reasons - increased rate of autism, learning disabilities
Inclusive Classes • Move towards inclusive settings. • Greater number of children with autism and learning disabilities are being taught in the regular classroom. • Supports in place will be helpful for teacher and student.
Reduced social skills may lead to… • Reduced self-esteem • Decreased sense of belonging • Reduced sense of responsibility • Increased aggressive behavior • Increased withdrawn behavior • Reduced maturity • Decreased student personal • satisfaction • Reduced student relationships • Decreased problem solving abilities • Decreased ability to deal with stress
Impact of reduced social skills on educational performance? • Decreased classroom participation • Reduced grades • Difficult classroom and/or school environment • Bullying
Why work on social skills? • Improved classroom management • Improved grades • Improved school safety • Positive school environment
Skillstreaming • Social skills training program being used in the schools. • Goal - teach desirable skills to improve social skills in a systematic way. • Positively reinforcing good social behaviors. • Uses teacher and peer modeling and role play. • Includes checklists that can be used for assessing social skills in an organized and measureable way.
Skillstreaming Assessments • The Skillstreaming program has three checklists. • They measure social behaviors in a variety of real life situations. • The Teacher Skillstreaming Checklist - rates teacher’s perception of the social skills of the student in the classroom and in other school settings. • The Parent Skillstreaming Checklist - rates parent’s perceptions of the child’s skill levels in the home and neighborhood. • The Student Skillstreaming Checklist – rates student’s perception of his/her own social skills in the home and school environment.
Teacher/Parent Checklists Each child is rated on 60 social skills using the following scale - • 1 if the child is almost never good at using the skill. • 2 if the child is seldom good at using the skill. • 3 if the child is sometimes good at using the skill. • 4 if the child is often good at using the skill. • 5 if the child is almost always good at using the skill.
Some Skills • Listening • Asking for Help • Saying Thank You • Ignoring Distractions • Joining In • Conversational Skills • Sharing • Apologizing
More Skills • Dealing with Feelings • Using Self-Control • Responding to Teasing • Staying out of Trouble • Dealing with Embarrassment • Reacting to Failure • Dealing with Losing
Wonderings About Checklists – with regard to social skills…. • Can they help measure the educational impact using parent/teacher input? • Are parent and teacher perceptions similar of different? • Can they provide us with a reliable baseline? • Can they assist in providing data-driven, individualized instruction? • Can they drive parent/teacher/therapist communication in a more objective manner?
Implementation of the Study • Data was collected on 5 first and second grade students at MRS. • Each student was identified as having delays in social skills. These difficulties were documented in writing by an IEP, a 504 or and I&RS plan. • The children were all in a regular education setting (regular ed or inclusive class). • Data was collected on each of the identified students utilizing 3 checklists. • Two of the checklists administered were from the Skillstreaming program – the Teacher Checklist and the Parent Checklist. • All students were also administered the Assessment of Pragmatic Skills • This checklist administered by a speech pathologist to reduce subjectivity.
Comparison of Initial Results from Social Skills Checklists – Parent, Teacher and Therapist Figure 1 Blue =Parent Survey, Red=Teacher Survey, Green=Therapist Checklist
Comments • There is room on the parent and teacher assessments to write comments. • Although the comments were unexpected, they were very informative.
Comments • “Doesn’t realize why others are mad or annoyed at his behavior.” • “Sometimes his perception of the rules differs from others. He then becomes upset thinking others are wrong.” • “He doesn’t like to lose. Will often accuse others of cheating during games.”
Interpretations • An educational impact was noted. • There appears to be reliability in the informal checklists. • Teacher, parent and therapist’s perceptions appear closely correlated. • Teachers and parents wrote comments that turned out to be very useful for grouping and individualized target selection.
What was done with the information? • Parent/teacher/therapist communication. • Qualified students for social skills training and/or speech therapy by establishing an educational impact using parent and teacher input. • Children were grouped for Skillstreaming and individualized targets were selected – service delivery model and frequency varied.
Service Delivery Models • Small group – speech therapy in therapy room – ran by speech therapist • Circle of Friends - a “social club” during lunch/recess, 50% typical and 50% socially delayed for 30 or 45 minutes – ran by a teacher, aide or CST member • Large group – presented to the entire class in a lesson format, has been utilized at MRS in an inclusive class.
Steps in Skillstreaming • Define the skill • Establish student skill need with a discussion • Teacher role play • Peer role play • Provide performance feedback • Review
Is It Working? • The teachers were given a copy of the teacher’s checklist again in March 2012. • This data was used to compare individual performance on the teacher’s checklist before and after implementation of Skillstreaming. • Teachers were also given a survey discussing progress and the data was compiled to see trends.
Comparison of September and March Skillstreaming Checklist Results Figure 2 - Blue=Teacher Results before Skillstreaming, Red=Results in March 2012
Teacher’s Survey Please rate improvement – • Classroom behavior • Friendship making skills • Dealing with Feelings • Dealing with Stress
Teacher Survey • 1 – No improvement • 2 – Little improvement • 3- Some improvement • 4 – Good improvement • 5 – Exceptional improvement
Interpretation • The survey results appeared to demonstrate at least some improvement. • Checklists had mixed results. • The checklist may not be sensitive enough to measure progress over a short period of time. • Some children may need more intensive intervention or intervention over a longer period.
Reflection ???????????????????????????????? Does that data provide some supporting evidence that the Skillstreaming assessments are accurate and useful in evaluating and treating our students’ with social skill deficits?
Yes! • It did demonstrate an educational impact utilizing parent/teacher input. • Parents/teachers appear to be good reporters. • Checklists can be used to create a baseline. • Useful information for individualized, data-driven instruction. • Useful for grouping of children based on their social skills needs.
Also Useful tool for…… • Parent/therapist communication • Teacher/therapist communication • Parent/teacher communication • Parent conferences, IEP and I&RS meetings
But….. • The tools don’t give as a severity level. • They are not based on normative data. • The accuracy scales are still subjective. • Parent/teacher perspectives can influence results.
Yes! At least some students appeared to benefit based on data collected but…….. • The checklists may not be sensitive enough measure progress over a short period of time (under a year). • Some children may need more intense intervention than what they were receiving. • Others factors may have led to the improvement.
External factors contributed to the improvement ?? • Home life • Adjusting to teacher/class • Classroom/school-based initiatives (ex. Be a Buddy not a Bully, Peer buddies)
Other Factors to Consider • Small group of children targeted. • Various service delivery models with different frequencies and durations were utilized. • May be beneficial to tease out if children improved on certain skills and not others and why.
Conclusions • The Skillstreaming program help make informal assessment more measurable and organized with parent/teacher input. The tools appear to be useful for communication and therapy. • It appears that at least some of the children are benefiting from the Skillstreaming program. • It is difficult to decipher out what service delivery model and frequency of services is most effective.
References • McGinnis, Ellen& Goldstein, Arnold, (1997), Skillstreaming in the Elementary School Child Revised Edition. • McGinnis, Ellen& Goldstein, Arnold, (1997). Skillstreaming in the Elementary School Child Revised Edition: Program Forms. • Shipley, K &McAfee, J. (1992), Assessment in Speech-Language Pathology: A Resource Manual