| Literature DB >> 35305544 |
Gulnoza Yakubova1, Melissa A Defayette2, Briella Baer Chen2.
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness of a video modeling (VM) intervention package (including virtual manipulatives and error correction) delivered via synchronous, virtual environment to teach the mathematics skills of addition, number comparison, and subtraction to a five-year old autistic child. Using a multiple probe across skills design of a single-case experimental design, we examined whether a causal relation existed between the intervention and the child's improved accuracy of mathematics problem-solving. Following the intervention, the autistic child showed improved accuracy across all three skills and continued to solve problems with 100% accuracy during the generalization phase, which also served as the immediate maintenance phase.Entities:
Keywords: Autism; Mathematics; Online instruction; Parental support; Video modeling
Year: 2022 PMID: 35305544 PMCID: PMC8934015 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-022-05525-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
Parent Protocol
| Guideline | Phase |
|---|---|
| Please do not offer any prompting or assistance related to computation or math problem-solving skills | • All phases |
| If your child looks to you for help or for confirmation of their problem-solving, you may tell them “Try your best,” “it’s OK if you’re not sure,” “good job working hard, keep going,” etc., but please do not give them any hints or prompts as to how to solve the problem, or confirm or deny that they are solving it correctly | • Baseline |
| • Generalization | |
| You may prompt your child | • All phases |
| If your child is not watching the video while it is playing, please prompt him/her to watch it | • Intervention |
| If your child has trouble moving the virtual manipulatives, you may provide verbal prompts or modeling, but do not prompt or model how to solve the problem (In other words, you can model/prompt how to move the manipulatives, but not in a specific way related to solving them problem) | • Intervention |
| You may: | • Intervention |
| 1.Tell your child to watch the video again | |
| 2.Tell your child to look at the screen or the math problem | |
| 3.Tell your child to try their best | |
| Your child is allowed to use paper and pencil if they would like to do so | • Baseline |
| • Generalization | |
| If your child needs help with the technology, you may provide assistance | • All phases |
| At the end of each session, please provide positive verbal praise to your child for completing the worksheet (e.g., “great job working hard!”). We will also provide similar verbal praise | • All phases |
| Please do not explicitly practice these math skills outside of the study sessions | • Baseline |
| • Intervention |
Fig. 1Camille’s correct responses displayed as percentages for across three skills
Mean percentage of accuracy of responses per skill type and phase with the standard deviation and the number of sessions needed to reach mastery criterion
| Skill | Baseline (SD) | Intervention (SD) | Generalization (SD) | Number of sessions until mastery |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addition | 0% (0) | 83% (25.4) | 66% (33.5) | 5 |
| Number comparison | 0% (0) | 100% (0) | 88% (19.6) | 2 |
| Subtraction | 0% (0) | 79% (18.6) | 100% (0) | 5 |
Tau-U effect size trend comparisons for each skill, including a weighted average
| Skill | Baseline-intervention | Baseline-generalization | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tau-U | p-value | 90% CI | Tau-U | p-value | 90% CI | |
| Addition | 1 | 0.0143 | 0.328–1 | 1 | 0.0495 | 0.162–1 |
| Number comparison | 1 | 0.0143 | 0.328–1 | 1 | 0.0339 | 0.225–1 |
| Subtraction | 1 | 0.370–1 | 1 | 0.0253 | 0.264–1 | |