| Literature DB >> 30972654 |
Heather J Nuske1, Melanie Pellecchia2, Viktor Lushin2, Keiran Rump2, Max Seidman2, Rachel R Ouellette3, Diana Cooney2, Brenna B Maddox2, Gwendolyn M Lawson2, Amber Song2, Erica M Reisinger2, David S Mandell2.
Abstract
One-to-one instruction is a critical component of evidence-based instruction for students with autism spectrum disorder, but is not used as often as recommended. Student characteristics may affect teachers' decisions to select a treatment and/or implement it. This study examined the associations between students' clinical and demographic characteristics and teachers' reported use of discrete trial training (DTT) and pivotal response training (PRT). Children's higher sensory symptoms, lower social approach, lower verbal skills and higher self-regulation difficulties were associated with more frequent 1:1 DTT and PRT. Results suggest that teachers give more frequent 1:1 instruction to children with more observable impairments, do not match children to type of 1:1 intervention, and may inadvertently neglect other students for whom individualized intervention may still be beneficial.Entities:
Keywords: 1:1 Instruction; Child characteristics; Personalized medicine; Teacher decisions
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30972654 PMCID: PMC6610655 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-019-04004-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257