| Literature DB >> 24711926 |
Elizabeth C Bacon1, Sarah Dufek2, Laura Schreibman1, Aubyn C Stahmer3, Karen Pierce4, Eric Courchesne4.
Abstract
Measuring progress of children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) during intervention programs is a challenge faced by researchers and clinicians. Typically, standardized assessments of child development are used within research settings to measure the effects of early intervention programs. However, the use of standardized assessments is not without limitations, including lack of sensitivity of some assessments to measure small or slow progress, testing constraints that may affect the child's performance, and the lack of information provided by the assessments that can be used to guide treatment planning. The utility of a curriculum-based assessment is discussed in comparison to the use of standardized assessments to measure child functioning and progress throughout an early intervention program for toddlers with risk for ASD. Scores derived from the curriculum-based assessment were positively correlated with standardized assessments, captured progress masked by standardized assessments, and early scores were predictive of later outcomes. These results support the use of a curriculum-based assessment as an additional and appropriate method for measuring child progress in an early intervention program. Further benefits of the use of curriculum-based measures for use within community settings are discussed.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24711926 PMCID: PMC3966353 DOI: 10.1155/2014/964704
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism Res Treat ISSN: 2090-1933
Participant demographics.
| Gender | |
| Male | 36 |
| Female | 9 |
| Age (months) | |
| Intake | 22.67 (4.13) |
| Exit | 34.06 (3.25) |
| Length of treatment program | |
| Months in intervention | 11.53 (4.04) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Hispanic or Latino | 12 |
| Not-Hispanic or Latino | 21 |
| Not reported | 12 |
| Race | |
| American Indian or Alaska Native | 0 |
| Asian | 3 |
| Black or African American | 4 |
| Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander | 1 |
| White | 25 |
| Not reported | 12 |
Note: averages listed with standard deviations within parentheses.
aSLP assessment example.
| Lesson | Concept | Example instruction cue | Target skill | Student response | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preverbal communication | Goal directed reach to request | Teacher holds up object | Child reaches toward desired object | Rarely | Sometimes | Usually |
| Eye contact to request | Teacher blocks access/withholds desired object | Child makes eye contact to obtain desired object | Rarely | Sometimes | Usually | |
| Proximal point to request | Teacher holds up object | Child points to desired object | Rarely | Sometimes | Usually | |
| Teacher holds up two objects | Child points to indicate a choice between two objects | Rarely | Sometimes | Usually | ||
|
| ||||||
| Expanded learning to play | Multiple-step imitation | Verbal cue: “Do this.” Nonverbal play model: teacher puts man in toy car and then pushes the car | Student models teacher's action (e.g., student puts man in a toy car and then student pushes car) | Never | If prompted | Independently |
|
| ||||||
| Expanded playing with toys | Following two- or three-step play commands | Teacher gives verbal cue (e.g., “Put man in car and push car”) | Student responds to teacher cue without need for initiation (e.g., student puts man in the toy car and pushes it) | Never | If prompted | Independently |
| Independent construction or functional play | No specific cue is needed | Child plays appropriately with toy during reinforcement phase of PRT lessons | Never | If prompted | Independently | |
Summary of assessment scores.
| MSEL ELC | |
| Intake | 75.44 (14.87) |
| Exit | 83.51 (21.76)* |
| Change scores | 8.07 (16.46) |
| VABS ABC | |
| Intake | 84.38 (11.46) |
| Exit | 83.13 (10.85) |
| Change scores | −1.24 (11.58) |
| aSLP score | |
| Intake | 23.56 (24.27) |
| Exit | 120.58 (61.87)* |
| Change scores | 97 (50.96) |
Note: average scores listed with standard deviations within parentheses.
*Indicates statistically significant change from intake to exit.
Figure 1aSLP scores for each participant over time. Each participant is depicted by one line. The aSLP was administered to each child at intake into the early intervention program and every 3 months thereafter. The aSLP score depicts the number of skills mastered at each assessment. Significant changes were seen in aSLP scores from intake to exit from the early intervention program.
Figure 2Correlations between the aSLP scores and MSEL ELC and VABS ABC at intake and exit of the early intervention program. Correlation coefficients are reported for Pearson correlations and partial correlations controlling for the amount of time in intervention. Significant positive correlations were found between all measures.
Figure 3Correlation between MSEL ELC change scores and aSLP change scores (i.e., change in scores from intake to exit). Correlation coefficients are reported for the Pearson correlation and partial correlation controlling for the amount of time each child was in treatment. A significant positive correlation was found. Children exhibited an average of 97 aSLP skills learned on average and an average change score of 8 on the MSEL ELC.
Figure 4Correlation (controlling for the amount of time each child was in treatment) between VABS ABC change scores and aSLP change scores (i.e., change in scores from intake to exit). Correlation coefficients are reported for the Pearson correlation and partial correlation controlling for the amount of time each child was in treatment. A significant positive correlation was found. Children exhibited an average of 97 aSLP skills learned on average and an average change score of −1 on the VABS ABC.
Figure 5A linear regression between aSLP scores at 3 months and exit. aSLP scores at 3 months into treatment significantly predicted aSLP scores when participants exited the program.