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Supporting Social and Emotional Competence in Preschool Children

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Children's Social Emotional Competence
Children's Well-being
Interventions
Behavioral: Promoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS), Preschool Edition
Registration Number
NCT04512157
Lead Sponsor
Stockholm University
Brief Summary

Social emotional competence is instrumental to children's health and development. The preschool edition of Promoting Alternative THinking Strategies (PATHS®) intervention was tested in this study. PATHS® is a universal teacher implemented, and school-based intervention. In the first years of this study, PATHS® which was originally developed in the United States was adapted for a Swedish preschool context according to a theoretical model for intervention cultural adaptation entitled the Planned Intervention Adaptation (PIA) protocol. After the cultural adaptation process, a two-wave pre-posttest randomized controlled trial of PsPATHS was conducted with Swedish preschool aged children. Implementation data were collected and outcome evaluation results are being finalized at the time that this protocol is being submitted in August 2020.

Detailed Description

Social emotional competence is instrumental to children's health and development. The preschool edition of Promoting Alternative THinking Strategies (PATHS®) intervention was tested in this study. PATHS® is a universal teacher implemented, and school-based intervention that aims to give preschool children a strategically timed boost in social emotional competence. Specifically, PATHS® encourages the use of interactive techniques to bolster children's ability to self-regulate, increase their adeptness at social cognitive problem solving, as well as to gain insight into their emotions and emotions of others. In the first years of this study, PATHS® which was originally developed in the United States was adapted for a Swedish preschool context according to a theoretical model for intervention cultural adaptation entitled the Planned Intervention Adaptation (PIA) protocol. PIA calls for specific small-scale research studies that guide the cultural adaptation of an imported intervention. After the cultural adaptation process, a two-wave pre-posttest randomized controlled trial of PsPATHS was conducted with Swedish preschool aged children. The main study, which this protocol documents was a two-wave pre to posttest, cluster randomized controlled trial with multi-method and informant assessment (N = 285 four and five-year-old Swedish children; 145 wait-list control and 140 intervention). Implementation data were collected and outcome evaluation results are being finalized at the time that this protocol is being submitted in August 2020.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
285
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
PATHS, Intervention preschoolsPromoting Alternative Thinking Strategies (PATHS), Preschool EditionThese preschools implement PATHS for one school year
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Social problem solving1 year

Child task: Social problem solving is measured by the Challenging Situations Task scores for competent, aggressive, and inept responses. For each category of response, a maximum of four was possible.

Inhibitory control 11 year

Child task: inhibitory control as measured by number of correct responses on the Knock \& Tap task from NEPSY (Korkman et al., 1998). Possible range of scores was 0 to 30, with high scores indicating good inhibitory control.

Working memory1 year

Child task: accuracy score on the Word span task as an index of working memory (Tillman et al., 2008). The score was calculated as the sum of correctly remembered words in the right order, maximum of 30 points, with high scores indicating good working memory.

Emotional knowledge1 year

Child task: Emotional knowledge is measured by Assessment of Children's Emotions Skills (ACES; Schultz, et al., 2001) accuracy score. One point was given for each correct response. The 10 faces with clear emotional expressions were used for this scale score. The maximum score was 10, indicating excellent emotional knowledge.

Emotional awareness1 year

Child task: Emotional awareness is measured by the Challenging Situations Task (Denham et al., 1994) score called Label Emotional responses (sum score across four situations, with one point given for each correct response).

Inhibitory control 21 year

Child task: accuracy score on an adapted version of the Day-Night task (Gerstadt et al., 1994). Possible range of scores was 0 to 48, with high scores indicating good inhibitory control.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Prosocial/communication skills1 year

Teachers rated Prosocial/communication skills using the Social Competence Scale (SCS; Sorensen et al., 2016). Mean score was calculated, with items rated from 0 to 4. High mean score indicated good skills.

Child's Emotional self-regulation1 year

Teachers rated Child's Emotional self-regulation using the Social Competence Scale (SCS; Sorensen et al., 2016). Mean score was calculated, with items rated from 0 to 4. High mean score indicated good skills.

Child's Academic skills1 year

Teachers rated Child's Academic skills using the Social Competence Scale (SCS; Sorensen et al., 2016). Mean score was calculated, with items rated from 0 to 4. High mean score indicated good skills.

Prosocial skills1 year

Observer ratings: Observers rated Prosocial skills of children across two standardized play situations, ratings were seven items from the Prosocial/communication skills subscale of the SCS. The seven items on this scale were rated on a 5-point Likert scale from 1 (Not At All) to 5 (Very Well). Mean score was calculated, with a high mean score indicating good skills.

Task orientation1 year

Observer ratings: Task orientation of children was rated on a Task Orientation scale (adapted from Smith-Donald et al., 2007). Interviewers used this scale to rate the child's ability to sustain attention across the performed tasks children. Interviewers rated nine items on a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 0 (Not True At All) to 4 (Very True). Mean score was calculated, with a high mean score indicating good skills.

Social cooperation1 year

Teacher ratings: Children's social cooperation skills were rated by teachers using the Preschool and Kindergarten Behavior Scale (PKBS; Merrell, 1996). Likert scale ranging from 0 to 3. Mean score was calculated, with a high mean score indicating good skills.

Social interaction1 year

Teacher ratings: Children's social interaction skills were rated by teachers using the Preschool and Kindergarten Behavior Scale (PKBS; Merrell, 1996). Likert scale ranging from 0 to 3. Mean score was calculated, with a high mean score indicating good skills.

Social independence1 year

Teacher ratings: Children's social independence skills were rated by teachers using the Preschool and Kindergarten Behavior Scale (PKBS; Merrell, 1996). Likert scale ranging from 0 to 3. Mean score was calculated, with a high mean score indicating good skills.

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