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Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence- based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, Ph.D. Minnesota State University, Mankato Lauren Arbolino, Ph.D Nationwide Children’s Hospital
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Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Mar 27, 2015

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Page 1: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-

based practice for students with EBD in

applied settings

Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D.Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, Ph.D.Minnesota State University, Mankato

Lauren Arbolino, Ph.DNationwide Children’s Hospital

Page 2: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Introduction

• Writing is considered an essential skill for children’s success.

• Writing has been identified as a neglected skill (National Commission on Writing, 2003).

• The writing skills of children in the United States has been summarized as– “. . . not what it should be” (p. 7)

Page 3: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

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The Nation’s Report Card (2002) – Writing

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The Nation’s Report Card (2002) – Writing

Two-thirds of students did not demonstrate solid performance in writing

Below Basic At Basic At Proficient Advanced0

20

40

60

80

100

Per

cen

t

72% 28%

Fourth-Grade Students

One-third of the students demonstrated solid or superior performance in writing

Page 5: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Academics & EBD

• The relationship between emotional and behavioral disorders and low academic achievement has been well documented in the literature (Wehby et al, 2003).

• Despite this, academic deficits of students with emotional and behavioral disorders is often secondary to behavior/emotional needs (Gunter & Denny, 1998)

Page 6: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Academics & EBD

• Historically, less emphasis on academics for EBD students

• Problem behaviors are mitigated when students are engaged in instruction

• Academic lesson and intervention must be instructionally appropriate

• Reinforcement that is often and specific is effective

Page 7: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Writing intervention for students with EBD• Recent research has sought to

identify interventions to remediate academic skills for students with emotional and behavioral disorders.

• Behavioral Disorders special issue– Reading – Writing

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The Nation’s Report Card: Implications

• Significant number of students have not developed mastery in basic writing skills

• Students at greatest risk for not developing mastery include:– Eligible for free/reduced price lunch

(83%)– English Language Learners (93%)– Eligible for special education services

(83%)

Page 9: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Research-Based Effective Teaching Strategies

• Students learn more when they are actively engaged in instructional tasks

• High success rates correlate positively with student learning outcomes

• The more content covered, the greater the potential for student learning

• Students become independent learners through instruction that is deliberate and carefully planned

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How Do We Improve Children’s Basic Writing Skills?• Lower-order writing skills:

– Handwriting and spelling– Capitalization, punctuation, and

grammar– Text generation

• Higher-order writing skills:– Planning processes– Text generation (increased

expectations for amount, nature, quality)

SOURCES: Berninger, V. W. et al. (2006). Tier 1 and Tier 2 early intervention for handwriting and composing. Journal of School Psychology, 44, 3-30.  Graham, S., & Harris, K. R. (2005). Improving the writing performance of young struggling writers. The Journal of Special Education, 39, 19-33. 

Page 11: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

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How Do We Improve Children’s Basic Writing Skills?• Writing

fluency:The total number of words written within 3 minutes

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How Do We Improve Children’s Writing Fluency?• Provide

instructional/performance feedback to promote children’s writing fluency

• Based on Thorndike’s law of effect (1898, 1911): Feedback serves to reinforce stimulus-response association

Page 13: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Classwide Performance Feedback Study

• 11 week study – 2 weeks for baseline; 9 weeks for

intervention

• 4 Middle School classrooms– 7 participants were assigned to the

No Feedback Condition– 8 participants were assigned to the

Performance Feedback Condition

• Participants were probed once a week at the beginning of the class

Page 14: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Results

Baseline Intervention

No Feedback

40.7 44.5

Feedback 28.8 48.1

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Choice v. No Choice Study

• 6 week study• 1 Elementary School classroom

– 6 participants– Administered either Choice or No

Choice writing session

• All 6 participants performed better during the Choice condition

• 5 of 6 participants made more gains across time during the Choice condition

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Evidence Based Strategies – Give choiceGive choice– Performance feedbackPerformance feedback– Student-interest driven

materials– Peer learning activities– Self-monitoring– Tie-in with reinforcement

Page 25: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Conclusions

• Performance Feedback Study– ROI

• No Feedback= 0.97• Feedback= 3.81

• Choice Study– ROI

• No Choice= 1.27• Choice= 3.83

Page 26: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Intervention Advantages

• Monitoring • Clearly defined • Already a component of the

classroom activities• Training • Length of time • Class-wide• Increased interest and motivation

Page 27: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Future Directions• Replicate in different settings

– Self contained class in public school– Inclusive

• Evaluate benefits of reinforcement in combination with other interventions

• Evaluate generalization of effects• Application of effective practices

with EBD population – Mason et al., 2010– Little et al., 2010

Page 28: Writing Interventions: Implementing evidence-based practice for students with EBD in applied settings Carlos J. Panahon, Ph.D. Alexandra Hilt-Panahon,

Contact Information

Carlos J. Panahon, [email protected]

Minnesota Sate University, Mankato

Mankato, MN

Alexandra Hilt-Panahon, [email protected]

Minnesota State University, Mankato

Mankato, MN

Lauren A. Arbolino, [email protected]

Nationwide Children’s Hospital

Columbus, OH