Increasing intervention implementation in general education following consultation: a comparison of two follow-up strategies

G H Noell, J C Witt, L H LaFleur, B P Mortenson, D D Ranier, J LeVelle, G H Noell, J C Witt, L H LaFleur, B P Mortenson, D D Ranier, J LeVelle

Abstract

This study examined two strategies for increasing the accuracy with which general education teachers implemented a peer tutoring intervention for reading comprehension. The intervention was implemented for 5 elementary school students who had been referred for consultation services. Initial implementation of the intervention by the teachers was variable, and the data exhibited a downward trend. When consultants held brief daily meetings with the teachers to discuss the intervention, implementation improved for 2 of 5 participants. Four of the teachers implemented the intervention at levels substantially above baseline during the performance feedback condition, whereas implementation for 1 teacher increased following discussion of an upcoming follow-up meeting with the principal. Student reading comprehension scores improved markedly during the peer tutoring intervention. Three students maintained these gains 4 weeks after the intervention ended. The implications of these findings for the maintenance of accurate treatment implementation in applied settings are discussed.

References

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Source: PubMed

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