A Transdiagnostic Social Skills Intervention; Using a Structured Story to Teach Children How to Ask a Friend to Play


Autoria(s): Santy, Elizabeth
Data(s)

10/07/2014

Resumo

An (independent samples comparison) controlled study was conducted to assess the efficacy of a novel approach to social skills training for children in a local socialization group at Knippenberg, Patterson & Associates (KPA). The treatment condition involved the combination of a Structured Story (i.e., novel bibliotherapy technique for children with social skills deficits), and a behavioral rehearsal (or role-play) segment, where the children practiced the target social skill featured in the Structure Story. The control group did not receive the Structured Story nor the behavioral rehearsal. Children in both groups engaged in ten-minutes of free play that was videorecorded for later observation and scoring by the principal investigator. Two target behaviors were assessed; asking a friend to play, and duration of joint play between two or more peers. The results did not show significant differences for either target variable between the group that received the novel intervention and the control group. Limitations of the current study and implications for further research are discussed.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.du.edu/capstone_masters/56

http://digitalcommons.du.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1055&context=capstone_masters

Publicador

Digital Commons @ DU

Fonte

Doctoral Papers and Masters Projects

Palavras-Chave #Transdiagnostic; social skills; structured story; play #Psychology
Tipo

text