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Researching the IY Therapeutic Dino School Programme with high risk KS1 children in Gwynedd Schools: The BIG Lottery Grant Professor Judy Hutchings QuickTime™ TIFF (Uncompr are needed t

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Researching the IY Therapeutic Dino School Programme with high risk KS1 children in Gwynedd Schools: The BIG Lottery Grant. Professor Judy Hutchings. Overview. Background Rationale Randomisation Sample size Intervention Measures Data collection Proposed Analysis Project Management. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Professor Judy Hutchings

Researching the IY Therapeutic Dino School Programme with

high risk KS1 children in Gwynedd Schools:

The BIG Lottery GrantProfessor Judy HutchingsQuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 2: Professor Judy Hutchings

OverviewBackgroundRationaleRandomisationSample sizeInterventionMeasuresData collectionProposed AnalysisProject Management

Page 3: Professor Judy Hutchings

Background Children who lack social & emotional competence display

anti-social behaviour & conduct problems. These children are at risk of developing early onset

Conduct Disorder (CD). CD is the biggest child mental health problem and is

increasing. Children with early onset CD have a poor long term

prognosis. CD predicts school drop out, substance abuse & violence. CD is often associated with attention deficit hyperactivity

disorder & a range of learning and other difficulties.

Page 4: Professor Judy Hutchings

Background Parenting interventions work but are not sufficient for all

high-risk children some of whom may need additional direct work.

It is not possible to engage all parents. Interventions for children must strengthen social and

emotional competencies and problem solving skills in order to reduce behaviour problems and achieve desired academic outcomes and school success.

High risk children may need a targeted intervention in addition to universally delivered school based programmes in order to increase the child’s opportunities to learn by discovery and experience.

Page 5: Professor Judy Hutchings

Rationale Additional academic skills coaching for high risk children

may not be effective unless they are first helped to learn basic social and emotional competencies

£400k funding was awarded by the BIG Lottery research fund to IY Cymru charity to undertake a three year study in partnership with Gwynedd Education Service and Bangor University (April 2010 – March 2013).

Children in KS1 in Gwynedd schools get the IY Classroom Dina Curriculum and their teachers are TCM trained.

The study will establish whether the IY Therapeutic Dina Programme (small group), delivered to high-risk KS1 children in Gwynedd Schools, improves their social and emotional competencies and academic engagement.

Page 6: Professor Judy Hutchings

Intervention The universal Classroom Dinosaur School Programme is an

effective early years curriculum for most KS1 children The Therapeutic Dinosaur School programme (Webster-

Stratton, 1990) produces significant benefits for clinically referred children in terms of reduced behaviour problems, increased problem solving skills and improved peer relationships

The classroom curriculum is delivered to all KSI children in the 102 primary schools across Gwynedd, North Wales.

There are a significant number of high-risk children in Gwynedd who might benefit from the additional coaching provided by the therapeutic Dinosaur School programme

Page 7: Professor Judy Hutchings

The Dino School curriculum in Wales

Aims to improves children’s ability to understand & communicate feelings, problem-solve, manage anger and make and keep friends.

Was developed and researched in Seattle as both a clinical therapeutic and a preventive classroom programme

The therapeutic programmme has been run successfully with CAMHS referred Welsh children (Hutchings et al 2007).

A pilot study of the Therapeutic Programme was undertaken with high-risk children in Bro Lleu School, Gwynedd, where children already have the Classroom curriculum

This demonstrated improved problem solving, reduced behavioural problems and increased positive behaviour towards teachers (Hutchings et al, submitted) .

This additional therapeutic programmme now needs to be researched in a larger randomised controlled trial.

Page 8: Professor Judy Hutchings

Intervention Dinosaur School Curriculum How to do your best in school How to become a feelings detective How to solve problems How to manage anger How to make and keep friends

The Therapeutic Dina Programme (Webster-Stratton, 1990) is delivered for two hours per week for a period of 18 - 20 weeks to groups of six children.

Sessions involve: homework review, introducing new material through discussion and by watching video-clips, role play practice, small group fun games and activities and homework activities

Page 9: Professor Judy Hutchings

Study design First ever study of the added benefits of the IY therapeutic

Dina curriculum for identified high-risk children already receiving the classroom curriculum

A three year randomised controlled trial (RCT) intervention for two years and one year for data analysis and write-up

Participants identified by teachers as within the cause for concern range on the Teacher Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (T-SDQ Goodman 1997)

Participants randomised on a 1:1 basis to intervention or waiting-list control. Randomisation undertaken by North Wales Organisation for Randomised Trials (NWORTH).

Schools deliver the programme to six intervention children in year one and to six control children the following year.

Page 10: Professor Judy Hutchings

Sample Size Was based on previous power calculations and predicted

reductions in the primary outcome measure (Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaire, Goodman, 1997).

20 schools, 10 to deliver the programme in the first year (Phase 1), and 10 the following year (Phase 2).

40 teachers and/or classroom assistants (2 per school) will deliver the programme.

240 children will participate (120 intervention, 120 waiting list control who receive an intervention the following year).

Page 11: Professor Judy Hutchings

Sample Gwynedd Education service will identify the 20 schools. Key stage 1 children aged 4-7 years old. High risk children will be identified through teacher

completed Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaires (T-SDQ, Goodman, 1997).

Parents will be approached by teachers and offered the chance for their child to participate in the research and receive the Therapeutic Dinosaur School Programme.

Page 12: Professor Judy Hutchings

Sample Randomisation will occur after baseline measures have

been collected and will ensure a balanced distribution of both age and sex in the intervention and control samples

Parents will be informed that their child will be chosen ‘by chance’ as to whether they will receive the intervention during the first or second year.

Page 13: Professor Judy Hutchings

Measures Will include standardised and validated measures:

Demographic data School report & absenteeism Child problem-solving (Wally problem solving test,

Webster-Stratton) Teacher & parent self-reports on stress & depression Teacher & parent reports on child social, behavioural and

emotional competencies (SDQ & Eyberg Child Behaviour Inventory, ECBI, Eyberg & Ross, 1978)

School-based observation (T-POT, Martin, in press) Teacher & parent satisfaction of the programme

Page 14: Professor Judy Hutchings

Data Sources It is important to collect data from teacher, parents and

children for triangulation purposes to establish;

a) whether the different sources of information produce broadly similar outcomes

b) whether there is generalisation of behaviour improvement across contexts, schools to home.

Page 15: Professor Judy Hutchings

Data Collection Two phases, with 10 schools in each, to ensure high

quality delivery and stagger data collection, training and delivery.

Phase 1: Data collected from teachers, parents & children from first 10 schools

for both intervention and control children, baseline data collected in September/October, intervention delivered November – April, follow-up measures collected May/June

Phase 2: Similar pattern for phase 2 schools in second year Both sets of control children receive the intervention during the

following school year

Page 16: Professor Judy Hutchings

Data Collection strategy Home visits will be initially undertaken to discuss the

research, to obtain written, informed consent and then to collect parent report data.

All data will be collected by research staff who will be blind as to the child’s condition (intervention or control) at both baseline and follow-up.

Research staff will be trained in observation measures until 80% inter-rater reliability is obtained.

Actual observation measures will be inter-rated for reliability for at least 20% of observations.

All parent & teacher report data will be double scored for accuracy before being entered into the database.

Page 17: Professor Judy Hutchings

Proposed Analysis Analysis of all children will be included according to trial

allocation. Characteristics of the sample will be analysed and

differences between the two groups will be established and controlled for.

Data on demographic variables will be analysed to establish for whom the intervention works best and why.

Differences between intervention and control will be based upon Analysis of Covariance (ANCOVA).

Effect sizes will be calculated using Cohen’s (1998) guidelines to enhance replicability and comparability and to indicate practical significance.

Page 18: Professor Judy Hutchings

Project Management A steering group committee will be established with Two nominated IY Cymru Charity Trustees Professor Judy Hutchings (Director) Gwynedd Education Service representative Bangor University representative.

Committee will meet quarterly.

Training in delivery of the programme will be organised and delivered through Incredible Years Wales.

Page 19: Professor Judy Hutchings

Lottery funded staffing Professor Judy Hutchings – part time grant manager for

the three years A full time Research Fellow for three years A half time Research Assistant for three years A F/T Research assistant for 6 months in year 2 to assist

in data collection A part time Admin Officer for three years A half time teacher seconded from Gwynedd Education

Service for two years to support school based staff in intervention delivery

(additional PhD studentship funded by Bangor University and IY Cymru)

Page 20: Professor Judy Hutchings

What makes this trial important

This will be the first rigorous trial of the IY therapeutic Dina programme for high-risk young children who are already receiving the classroom curriculum

It has been made possible by the lottery funding but also because of the innovative approach in Gwynedd to establish the classroom curriculum county-wide

Page 21: Professor Judy Hutchings

Diolch For more information please contact:

Professor Judy [email protected] (01248) 383758Website: www.incredibleyearswales.co.ukhttp://incredible-years-wales-

research.bangor.ac.uk