| Literature DB >> 35162512 |
Emma Leifler1,2,3, Christina Coco1,2, Anna Fridell1,2, Anna Borg1,2, Sven Bölte1,2,4,5.
Abstract
Including students with neurodevelopmental disabilities (NDDs) in regular classrooms has become a law-enforced common practice in many high- and middle-income countries. Still, without appropriate actions supporting the implementation of inclusive pedagogical practice, students with NDDs remain at increased risk for absenteeism, bullying and underachievement. There is limited knowledge on the feasibility of social skills group training (SSGT) in naturalistic settings. Using a qualitative approach, the objective of this study was to explore the lived experiences of (i) students diagnosed with autism or attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and those showing subclinical social difficulties receiving either SSGT or active social control activities in a regular senior high school setting, (ii) teachers providing SSGT or the active control activity and (iii) school leaders facilitating the implementation of these actions. Due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, comparison between real life versus digital administration of SSGT was also examined. Within a randomized controlled pilot trial of the school-tailored SSGT SKOLKONTAKT®, the primary perspectives of 20 students, teachers and school leaders on SSGT or the social control activities were explored. All groups perceived SSGT to enhance school attendance and academic achievement of students, as well as teacher inclusion skills and the social school climate. Findings indicate that SSGT is largely feasible and socially valid, and broader implementation of SSGT in school settings appears meaningful.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; autism; inclusive education; neurodevelopmental disabilities; school; social skills group training; social validity
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162512 PMCID: PMC8835167 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Student participant characteristics.
| Gender | Age | Primary Clinical Diagnosis | Co-Existing Diagnosis/Symptoms | Intervention Group | Interview Setting |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | 20 | ADHD | Social anxiety | SKOLKONTAKT | School |
| Female | 19 | ASD | - | SKOLKONTAKT | School |
| Diverse | 18 | ADHD | ASD, dyslexia | SKOLKONTAKT | School |
| Male | 18 | ADHD | ASD | SKOLKONTAKT | School |
| Male | 20 | ADHD | ASD | SKOLKONTAKT | Digitally from school |
| Female | 18 | ASD | ADD, OCD, Social anxiety | SKOLKONTAKT | Phonecall |
| Female | 18 | ADHD | ASD | Activity group | School |
| Male | 17 | ASD | Activity group | School | |
| Diverse | 17 | ASD | Activity group | School | |
| Male | 17 | ADHD | ASD | Activity group | Digitally from school |
| Diverse | 17 | ASD | ADHD | Activity group | Digitally from school |
| Male | 17 | ASD | Anxiety | Activity group | Digitally from school |
| Female | 19 | Social anxiety | Subclinical autistic symptoms | Activity group | Digitally from home |
Note. ASD = Autism Spectrum Disorder, ADHD = Attention-Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, OCD = Obsessive Compulsive Disorder.
Figure 1Characteristics of SKOLKONTAKT®.
Training formats in SKOLKONTAKT®.
| Training Format | Description | Objective |
|---|---|---|
| Mandatory | ||
| Agenda | Detailed and visualized information of the session, the structure and activities. | Give a clear structure and create safety through routines and transparency. |
| Opening session | Round of introductions. Expressions of feelings (visual support in emotion-figures as scaffolding structures). How do people feel today? Do they have something to share? Are there wishes for today’s session? | Warm-up activity, initiate contact, build safety, start interactions and give the opportunity to express mood, feelings and motivation. |
| Closing session | Evaluation of the session and recap of the day. Sharing positive and negative experiences with the activities and tasks. Round of evaluations. | Promotion of interaction between group members. Practicing talking in a group and remembering names and endorsing social overtures. |
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| ||
| Snack-time | Interaction in a non-structured situation. | Practice small-talk, practice turn-taking and encourage social skills use. |
| Group rules | Rules are formulated and founded by the group. Rules are visualized and made concrete for adolescents. Examples of rules: listen actively to each other, secrecy, only give positive feedback and use kind language. | Building safety and trust in the group and treating each other with respect. Creating an environment where adolescents dare to talk, open up and share experiences. |
| Homework assignments | Setting and perusing meaningful individual and general social communication goals. Examples of individual goals: ask questions, handle stressful situations, understand nonverbal signs and make an appointment with a classmate. | Building and training skills outside of the training context, behavior activation and generalization of skills to everyday situations. Personalization of social skills training. |
| Coaching sessions towards assignments and individual goals | Assignments are followed up and feedback is given by experienced facilitators. Barriers to goal attainment are analyzed and elements for goal completion are established. Group trainers give constructive feedback towards the assignments. | Reinforcement of social successful behaviors or receive suggestions on alternative approaches to goal attainment. Fine-tuning of personal goals. Opportunity to talk about own social experiences regarding concrete actions. |
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| ||
| Group activities | Baking together, cooking, playing sports and visiting a café or a museum. | Group cohesion and practicing cooperation and social skills in an informal setting. |
| Group discussions | Discussion of specific topics, e.g., to have social contact, recognize social situations in school, have feelings of loneliness, issues and typical problems of being young and to handle changes, misunderstandings and conflicts in school and life. | Exchanging experiences, social cognition, social relationships, feeling safe in a social setting, daring to raise your voice and have an opinion, sharing advice, practicing active listening and learning ways to handle challenges, stress and emotions. |
| Group exercises | Group games, social interaction games, how to handle stressful activities, watching the Movie for the Assessment of Social Cognition and facial affect recognition training. | Developing strategies for difficult social situations. Practice and discuss real-life situations, improve social thinking and detect socially relevant nonverbal signs. |
| Role-play | Participants play and practice challenges and real-life scenarios, where the group members discuss the situations and actions of the protagonists to find solutions and an action plan. | Mimicking and solving different social scenarios in a safe environment so that they are able to handle social situations better in real life and school. |
Interview guides by the respondent group.
| Students | Teachers | School Leaders |
|---|---|---|
| Which elements and contents from the training */activities ** do you recall? | Generally, what do you recall from the training/activities? | How did you receive information about the training/activities and the research project? |
| Which parts of the training/activities did you like the most, and why? | Which parts of the training/activities did you like the most/the least, and why? | Do you think there is a need of the training/activities in school settings? |
| Which part of the training/activities did you like the least, and why? | Are training/activities like this appropriate as part of your work at school? | Is the training/are the activities appropriate for your school setting? |
| Is there anything in the training/activities that you would have liked to train/do more or less? *** | Is there anything about the training/activities that you would have liked to focus on/do more or less? *** | In your role as school leader, what did you need to consider and had to arrange to implement the training/activities at your school? |
| What did you think of the group discussions? *** | What did you think of the group discussions? Were the themes in the discussion appropriate and valuable? *** | In which way have the training/activities positively and negatively influenced daily life at your school? |
| What did you think of the training homework? *** | What did you think of the training homework? * | Can you see any changes among the adolescents or the teachers associated with training/activities? |
| Do you think some parts of the training/activities might have helped you? Which activities and why? | Do you think some parts of the training/activities might have helped the adolescents? Which activities and why? | Is it realistic and possible to implement training/activities at your school in the future? |
| Do you think the training/activities have improved your social skills? In what way? | Have you seen any enhanced interactions or improved social behaviors in the adolescents following training/activities? | What is important to consider for implementation of training/activities? What training, resources and support do your staff need for implementation? |
| Are there any concrete or specific changes, positive or negative, in your life that you think are due to the training/activities? | Are there any concrete or specific changes, positive or negative, that you have observed or noticed, that you think are due to the training/activities? | Are there any areas of possible improvements from your view according to the whole process and co-operation with researchers? |
| Do you think participating in the training/the activities will give you long-lasting improved social skills in life or in school? If so, in what way? | What do you think of long-lasting effects after the training/activities? Are there any? Have you seen any? | Which parts of the training/activities do you think are valuable or less valuable for your school? |
| Is there anything that could be better or made differently in the training/activities? | Is it possible and realistic to conduct training/activities like these in school in the future? | Do you think the training/activities have any spin-off effects for the adolescents in school and outside? |
| Were there enough, too many or too few training/activities sessions? | What do you think of the amount of the training/activities’ sessions? | Do you think the number of sessions of the training/activities were appropriate? |
| What do you think of the fact that this training is in your school? Is it positive or negative? Have you taken part of training/activities like this before somewhere else? Did the training/activities put an additional burden on you? | Do you think you have gained more knowledge and tools to help and understand your students, to develop the adolescents’ understanding of others, to develop the acceptance of the adolescents among others, to motivate and teach the adolescents to strengthen social interaction, to modify your teaching in order to help students to reach their goals and help the students to develop self-esteem? | Do you think your teachers have gained more knowledge and tools during training/activities to help the students to develop skills and reach social goals and other achievements? |
Note. * The training = Social Skills Group Training (SSGT), ** The activities = social activities control intervention, *** only in students and teachers receiving or conducting SSGT.
Figure 2Thematic structure of social validity in social skills group training.