| Literature DB >> 29671644 |
Stephanie Y Shire1, Wendy Shih1, Ya-Chih Chang1, Connie Kasari1.
Abstract
Children with autism spectrum disorder experience delays in the development of nonverbal social communication gestures to request and to share (joint attention) as well as play skills such that intervention is required. Although such tools exist in research settings, community stakeholders also require access to brief, simple, and reliable tools to assess students' skills and set appropriate intervention targets. This study includes a sequence of two trials to examine implementation outcomes including adoption, fidelity, and feasibility of The Short Play and Communication Evaluation by educational professionals who work with preschoolers and toddlers with autism spectrum disorder in low-resource community classrooms. Findings demonstrate that classroom staff can deliver the Short Play and Communication Evaluation with high fidelity, collect live data, and set appropriate social communication and play skill targets for use in intervention. Furthermore, study 2 demonstrates that modifications to the study protocol resolved differences in children's skill profile obtained from the established research measures.Entities:
Keywords: assessment; autism; joint attention; paraprofessionals; play; schools; social communication
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 29671644 DOI: 10.1177/1362361316674092
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism ISSN: 1362-3613