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Optimizing a School-Based Therapeutic Play Intervention for Preschool Students

19. Mai 2026 aktualisiert von: Erinn Duprey, The Children's Institute

Optimizing a School-Based Therapeutic Play Intervention for Preschool Students: A Factorial Experiment Protocol

The goal of this clinical trial is to optimize a school-based therapeutic play intervention in preschool students with mild to moderate school adjustment difficulties. The aims are:

  1. Determine the independent and combined effects of three intervention components (individual play, peer play, and classroom push-in sessions) on preschool children's social and emotional competence, using a factorial experimental design.
  2. Use a community-engaged approach to identify and disseminate the optimized version of Primary Project for preschool implementation

Researchers will compare the main and interactive effects of three components on children's social-emotional competencies.

Participants will take part in a therapeutic play intervention in the school setting, and their teachers and caregivers will complete assessment instruments on children's social and emotional functioning.

Studienübersicht

Detaillierte Beschreibung

Background and rationale:

There are a growing number of children in the United States with mental, emotional, or behavioral health concerns (Perou et al., 2013; SAMHSA, 2022). Left untreated, these difficulties may persist through development and contribute to a wide range of negative outcomes in adolescence and adulthood. Consequently, there is a critical need to identify effective strategies that promote protective factors, enhance resiliency, and disrupt the causal processes that facilitate the emergence of subsequent mental health problems. Prevention programs that enhance young children's social and emotional competencies can both alleviate present difficulties and protect youth against future mental health problems (Greenberg et al., 2003; Greenberg et al., 2017).

Early childhood is a critical developmental period for social and emotional growth, with key developmental milestones including the growth of peer social skills and self-regulation abilities. Educational settings are important contexts for fostering young children's social and emotional development. Children who adjust well to the school setting are more apt to thrive in terms of their social and emotional skill development, whereas children who struggle with the transition to the early school years may face challenges across multiple domains (Alzahrani et al., 2019). It is these elevated symptoms detected within the general student population, not diagnoses of specific childhood disorders, that best predict adult mental health outcomes (Mulraney et al., 2021). Consequently, preventive interventions that include universal screening and encourage social and emotional skill development, while also facilitating a positive transition to the educational environment, are ideal.

School-based interventions are well positioned to strengthen children's social and emotional competencies and reduce future risk (National Research Council & Institute of Medicine, 2009). Schools serve as a context for growth in multiple domains of socioemotional development, including interpersonal skill development with peers and adult figures, intrapersonal awareness of academic and non-academic skills, coping with difficulties, and managing the simultaneous demands of curricular and extracurricular activities (Aviles et al., 2006). Further, recent evidence indicates that school-based interventions grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) are related to reductions in children's behavioral, emotional, and academic problems (Ray et al., 2015). There is also some growing evidence that non-clinical preventive interventions grounded in the tenets of CCPT (i.e., Child-Centered Play Interventions; CCPIs) are effective for children's social and emotional development (Perryman & Bowers, 2018). CCPIs are often more feasible and sustainable for schools - for instance, they are facilitated by a specially trained school-based paraprofessional (i.e., child associate) who is supervised by a licensed school-based mental health professional (Peabody et al., 2018). However, research based on CCPIs is limited.

Primary Project is a long-standing CCPI that targets children in kindergarten through third grade (approximately ages 5 - 9) who are having school adjustment difficulties (Johnson et al., 2005; Peabody et al., 2018). The program provides structured play sessions with trained paraprofessional child associates under the supervision of mental health professionals to support children with early school adjustment difficulties. The goals of Primary Project are to enhance school-related social and emotional competencies (e.g., task orientation and peer social skills) while reducing behavioral and interpersonal adjustment difficulties in children.

Prior research has established the effectiveness of Primary Project in improving school adjustment outcomes in young children (see Cowen et al., 1996 for a review) and a recent study demonstrated positive effects on children's school attendance (Lotyczewski et al., 2024). A recent randomized controlled trial supported the program's effectiveness for improving children's social skills and self-regulation (Aaron et al., forthcoming).

Building on this foundation, Primary Project was adapted for preschool-aged children (approximately age 4) by adding developmentally appropriate components, including a greater focus on peer-play skills. The Pre-K Primary Project model includes three core components: individual play sessions, structured peer play sessions, and classroom push-in sessions wherein the paraprofessional child associate provides individual support to the child in a classroom setting. Conceptually, these three components act upon proximal mediators (e.g., increasing emotion regulation skills and self-efficacy; facilitating positive peer relationships; and promoting school connectedness) to enhance children's overall social-emotional adjustment (Figure 1).

However, despite increasing implementation, the Pre-K Primary Project model has not undergone systematic evaluation to understand which components, and in what combination, are most effective. This represents a critical gap given the Pre-K model's multi-component nature. Understanding the individual and combined effects of its components is essential to guide schools towards efficient and sustainable program goals.

The current trial addresses this gap by using the Multiphase Optimization Strategy (MOST), an innovative translational framework (Guastaferro & Pfammatter, 2023) to develop and evaluate multi-component interventions (Collins et al., 2024; Guastaferro & Collins, 2019). MOST involves three phases: preparation, optimization, and evaluation. In the preparation phase, investigators establish a conceptual model, identify candidate intervention components, and define an optimization objective that balances effectiveness with practical constraints. In the optimization phase, the goal is to empirically identify the optimized intervention via a randomized controlled trial (RCT), often using a factorial experimental design. The optimized intervention is the combination of candidate intervention components that achieves the best balance of intervention effectiveness with affordability, scalability, and efficiency (i.e., intervention EASE; Collins et al., 2021) Finally, in the evaluation phase, the optimized intervention package is tested in a RCT, usually in a 2-arm trial, to confirm its effectiveness under real-world conditions compared to a suitable control.

The present trial represents the optimization phase of MOST. The specific optimization goal is to identify the combination of components that are most effective for improving children's social-emotional outcomes and school adjustment, while also being feasible in terms of program timing and resource constraints (e.g., ability to offer two full cycles per school year without incurring additional staffing costs). In sum, this trial examines whether individual play sessions, peer play sessions, and classroom push-ins, independently and in combination, improve preschool children's social-emotional adjustment. The overall goal is to develop an optimized program model for broader dissemination.

Objectives:

The primary objective of this trial is to optimize the Pre-K Primary Project intervention for strengthening preschool children's social-emotional adjustment. The first specific aim of this study is to determine the independent and combined effects of three intervention components (individual play, peer play, and classroom push-in sessions) on preschool children's social and emotional competence, using a factorial experimental design.

As an exploratory sub-aim, we also seek to explore the impact of intervention components on identified mediators including children's level of school connectedness, emotion regulation, and peer relationships. These exploratory analyses will inform iterative revisions to the conceptual model and future research studies.

Our second specific aim is to use a community-engaged approach to identify and disseminate the optimized version of Primary Project for preschool implementation. Specifically, we will work with school partners to consider the results from the optimization trial, balanced with the feasibility, sustainability, and affordability of different intervention packages (e.g., ability to offer two cycles per school year without incurring additional costs from staffing or other resources). These results will be disseminated via a new program manual and other materials targeted to both academic and non-academic audiences.

Studientyp

Interventionell

Einschreibung (Geschätzt)

225

Phase

  • Unzutreffend

Kontakte und Standorte

Dieser Abschnitt enthält die Kontaktdaten derjenigen, die die Studie durchführen, und Informationen darüber, wo diese Studie durchgeführt wird.

Studienkontakt

Studienorte

Teilnahmekriterien

Forscher suchen nach Personen, die einer bestimmten Beschreibung entsprechen, die als Auswahlkriterien bezeichnet werden. Einige Beispiele für diese Kriterien sind der allgemeine Gesundheitszustand einer Person oder frühere Behandlungen.

Zulassungskriterien

Studienberechtigtes Alter

  • Kind

Akzeptiert gesunde Freiwillige

Nein

Beschreibung

Inclusion Criteria: Children will be eligible if they are enrolled in preschool classrooms at participating schools and identified as appropriate for intervention through universal screening. Screening will be conducted using the Teacher-Child Rating Scale (T-CRS; Hightower et al., 1986), a teacher-completed measure of social-emotional adjustment. Children who score in the target range indicating emerging adjustment difficulties (i.e., 15th to 30th percentile) will be eligible for participation in the trial.

Exclusion Criteria: Children will be excluded if they demonstrate severe developmental impairments that would prevent participation in the intervention.

Studienplan

Dieser Abschnitt enthält Einzelheiten zum Studienplan, einschließlich des Studiendesigns und der Messung der Studieninhalte.

Wie ist die Studie aufgebaut?

Designdetails

  • Hauptzweck: Verhütung
  • Zuteilung: Zufällig
  • Interventionsmodell: Fakultätszuweisung
  • Maskierung: Single

Waffen und Interventionen

Teilnehmergruppe / Arm
Intervention / Behandlung
Experimental: Condition 1
Individual play sessions (8 weeks), Peer play pairs, Classroom sessions
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Children randomized to this condition will participate in structured play pairs, consisting of six, biweekly, 30-minute sessions with a peer and the child associate. Peers are non-study children who exhibit excellent social and emotional competencies, as observed and rated by their teachers during universal screening. Pairings will be determined collaboratively with teachers to ensure compatibility and opportunities for skill-building. Parents of play pairs give permission for their child to participate in regular Primary Project implementation. The sessions will be designed to promote social competence, cooperation, and peer connectedness by providing guided opportunities to practice skills such as sharing, turn-taking, communication, and conflict resolution. While maintaining a child-directed approach, the child associate will actively scaffold interactions by reflecting and reinforcing positive peer behaviors, providing gentle redirection when difficulties arise, and offering a vari
Children randomized to this condition will receive four, bi-weekly, classroom push-in sessions facilitated by the child associate. Push-in sessions will be scheduled weekly during regular classroom activities (e.g., circle time, free play, or small-group learning). During classroom push-in times, the child associate uses child-led therapeutic play techniques to help foster classroom engagement, positive peer interaction, and a sense of belonging for the target child. Child associates will coordinate with classroom teachers to integrate push-ins smoothly and to reinforce skills across settings.
Experimental: Condition 2
Individual play sessions (8 weeks), Peer play pairs
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Children randomized to this condition will participate in structured play pairs, consisting of six, biweekly, 30-minute sessions with a peer and the child associate. Peers are non-study children who exhibit excellent social and emotional competencies, as observed and rated by their teachers during universal screening. Pairings will be determined collaboratively with teachers to ensure compatibility and opportunities for skill-building. Parents of play pairs give permission for their child to participate in regular Primary Project implementation. The sessions will be designed to promote social competence, cooperation, and peer connectedness by providing guided opportunities to practice skills such as sharing, turn-taking, communication, and conflict resolution. While maintaining a child-directed approach, the child associate will actively scaffold interactions by reflecting and reinforcing positive peer behaviors, providing gentle redirection when difficulties arise, and offering a vari
Experimental: Condition 3
Individual play sessions (8 weeks), Classroom sessions
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Children randomized to this condition will receive four, bi-weekly, classroom push-in sessions facilitated by the child associate. Push-in sessions will be scheduled weekly during regular classroom activities (e.g., circle time, free play, or small-group learning). During classroom push-in times, the child associate uses child-led therapeutic play techniques to help foster classroom engagement, positive peer interaction, and a sense of belonging for the target child. Child associates will coordinate with classroom teachers to integrate push-ins smoothly and to reinforce skills across settings.
Experimental: Condition 4
Individual play sessions (8 weeks)
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Experimental: Condition 5
Individual play sessions (12 weeks), Peer play pairs, Classroom sessions
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Children randomized to this condition will participate in structured play pairs, consisting of six, biweekly, 30-minute sessions with a peer and the child associate. Peers are non-study children who exhibit excellent social and emotional competencies, as observed and rated by their teachers during universal screening. Pairings will be determined collaboratively with teachers to ensure compatibility and opportunities for skill-building. Parents of play pairs give permission for their child to participate in regular Primary Project implementation. The sessions will be designed to promote social competence, cooperation, and peer connectedness by providing guided opportunities to practice skills such as sharing, turn-taking, communication, and conflict resolution. While maintaining a child-directed approach, the child associate will actively scaffold interactions by reflecting and reinforcing positive peer behaviors, providing gentle redirection when difficulties arise, and offering a vari
Children randomized to this condition will receive four, bi-weekly, classroom push-in sessions facilitated by the child associate. Push-in sessions will be scheduled weekly during regular classroom activities (e.g., circle time, free play, or small-group learning). During classroom push-in times, the child associate uses child-led therapeutic play techniques to help foster classroom engagement, positive peer interaction, and a sense of belonging for the target child. Child associates will coordinate with classroom teachers to integrate push-ins smoothly and to reinforce skills across settings.
Experimental: Condition 6
Individual play sessions (12 weeks), Peer play pairs
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Children randomized to this condition will participate in structured play pairs, consisting of six, biweekly, 30-minute sessions with a peer and the child associate. Peers are non-study children who exhibit excellent social and emotional competencies, as observed and rated by their teachers during universal screening. Pairings will be determined collaboratively with teachers to ensure compatibility and opportunities for skill-building. Parents of play pairs give permission for their child to participate in regular Primary Project implementation. The sessions will be designed to promote social competence, cooperation, and peer connectedness by providing guided opportunities to practice skills such as sharing, turn-taking, communication, and conflict resolution. While maintaining a child-directed approach, the child associate will actively scaffold interactions by reflecting and reinforcing positive peer behaviors, providing gentle redirection when difficulties arise, and offering a vari
Experimental: Condition 7
Individual play sessions (12 weeks), Classroom sessions
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.
Children randomized to this condition will receive four, bi-weekly, classroom push-in sessions facilitated by the child associate. Push-in sessions will be scheduled weekly during regular classroom activities (e.g., circle time, free play, or small-group learning). During classroom push-in times, the child associate uses child-led therapeutic play techniques to help foster classroom engagement, positive peer interaction, and a sense of belonging for the target child. Child associates will coordinate with classroom teachers to integrate push-ins smoothly and to reinforce skills across settings.
Experimental: Condition 8
Individual play sessions (12 weeks)
All children will receive individual play sessions with a child associate in a designated playroom within the school. Sessions will last 20-30 minutes and occur twice per week. All sessions are grounded in child-centered play therapy (CCPT) principles. Child associates use a non-directive approach, allowing children to choose from a range of developmentally appropriate toys and play materials (e.g., art supplies, blocks, puppets, and imaginative play sets) that encourage expression, problem-solving, and emotional regulation. The role of the child associate is to create a safe and supportive environment, verbally reflect on children's actions and feelings, and facilitate their self-directed play in ways that promote social and emotional growth. In the factorial design, children will be randomized to receive either 8 or 12 individual play sessions.

Was misst die Studie?

Primäre Ergebnismessungen

Ergebnis Maßnahme
Maßnahmenbeschreibung
Zeitfenster
Social-emotional adjustment
Zeitfenster: Teachers will complete the T-CRS prior to study enrollment and randomization, and will complete a second T-CRS form for participants within 2 weeks of intervention completion.
The primary outcome is children's social-emotional adjustment, assessed using teacher reports on the Teacher-Child Rating Scale, short-form (T-CRS-sf; Weber et al., 2017). The key analysis metric will be change in T-CRS scores from baseline (pre-intervention) to post-intervention.
Teachers will complete the T-CRS prior to study enrollment and randomization, and will complete a second T-CRS form for participants within 2 weeks of intervention completion.

Sekundäre Ergebnismessungen

Ergebnis Maßnahme
Maßnahmenbeschreibung
Zeitfenster
School connectedness
Zeitfenster: Pre-intervention and post-intervention (within 1 week)
School connectedness will be assessed through a pilot Preschool School Connectedness Measure, a parent reported measure developed by researchers at Children's Institute, which captures children's sense of belonging and connectedness at school
Pre-intervention and post-intervention (within 1 week)
School anxiety
Zeitfenster: Pre- and post-intervention (within 1 week)
Parents will complete the Child Anxiety Life Interference Scale (Preschool Version), a validated parent-reported scale assessing children's anxiety symptoms related to school contexts.
Pre- and post-intervention (within 1 week)
Emotion Regulation
Zeitfenster: Pre- and post-intervention (within 1 week)
Parents will complete the Emotion Regulation Checklist (ERC), which assesses children's regulatory skills and emotional lability (Shields & Cicchetti, 1997).
Pre- and post-intervention (within 1 week)

Mitarbeiter und Ermittler

Hier finden Sie Personen und Organisationen, die an dieser Studie beteiligt sind.

Publikationen und hilfreiche Links

Die Bereitstellung dieser Publikationen erfolgt freiwillig durch die für die Eingabe von Informationen über die Studie verantwortliche Person. Diese können sich auf alles beziehen, was mit dem Studium zu tun hat.

Allgemeine Veröffentlichungen

Studienaufzeichnungsdaten

Diese Daten verfolgen den Fortschritt der Übermittlung von Studienaufzeichnungen und zusammenfassenden Ergebnissen an ClinicalTrials.gov. Studienaufzeichnungen und gemeldete Ergebnisse werden von der National Library of Medicine (NLM) überprüft, um sicherzustellen, dass sie bestimmten Qualitätskontrollstandards entsprechen, bevor sie auf der öffentlichen Website veröffentlicht werden.

Haupttermine studieren

Studienbeginn (Tatsächlich)

18. Oktober 2024

Primärer Abschluss (Geschätzt)

1. Juni 2027

Studienabschluss (Geschätzt)

1. August 2027

Studienanmeldedaten

Zuerst eingereicht

19. Mai 2026

Zuerst eingereicht, das die QC-Kriterien erfüllt hat

19. Mai 2026

Zuerst gepostet (Tatsächlich)

27. Mai 2026

Studienaufzeichnungsaktualisierungen

Letztes Update gepostet (Tatsächlich)

27. Mai 2026

Letztes eingereichtes Update, das die QC-Kriterien erfüllt

19. Mai 2026

Zuletzt verifiziert

1. Mai 2026

Mehr Informationen

Begriffe im Zusammenhang mit dieser Studie

Plan für individuelle Teilnehmerdaten (IPD)

Planen Sie, individuelle Teilnehmerdaten (IPD) zu teilen?

NEIN

Beschreibung des IPD-Plans

The study will protect the confidentiality of all data at all stages. Parents are informed during the consent process that all responses are confidential and are only for research purposes.

Only the investigator and authorized study personnel will have access to identifiable information. Data is stored on password-protected servers compliant with FERPA and all personal identifiers will be removed prior to analysis. Each participant will be assigned an anonymized study identifier.After data collection is complete, only deidentified data will be retained for analysis and long-term storage. These deidentified datasets will be stored on encrypted cloud-based servers with access restricted to the study team.

Data will be reported on in the aggregate, and we will not report on any subgroups with fewer than 10 individuals.

Arzneimittel- und Geräteinformationen, Studienunterlagen

Studiert ein von der US-amerikanischen FDA reguliertes Arzneimittelprodukt

Nein

Studiert ein von der US-amerikanischen FDA reguliertes Geräteprodukt

Nein

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