Baker-Henningham H, Walker S, Powell C, Gardner J Meeks
Department of Educational Studies, University of the West Indies, West Indies.
Child Care Health Dev. 2009 Sep;35(5):624-31. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2214.2009.00964.x. Epub 2009 Mar 23.
School-based interventions involving teacher and/or child training have been shown to benefit teacher practices and to prevent conduct problems and improve children's social and emotional competence in developed countries; however, we are aware of no reports from a developing country. We conducted a pilot study of the Incredible Years Teacher Training programme and a curriculum unit on social and emotional skills based on concepts and activities drawn from the Incredible Years Dina Dinosaur Classroom Curriculum to determine if this approach is appropriate for use with Jamaican pre-school teachers and children.
Five pre-schools in Kingston, Jamaica were randomly assigned to an intervention (3 pre-schools with 15 classrooms) or control (2 pre-schools with 12 classrooms) condition. Intervention involved seven whole-day teacher workshops using the Incredible Years Teacher Training programme supplemented by 14 child lessons in each class. The project was evaluated through structured observations of four categories of teacher behaviour and four observer ratings: two rating scales of child behaviour and two rating scales of classroom atmosphere.
Significant intervention benefits were found to teachers' behaviour with increased positive behaviour [b = 7.9; 95% confidence interval (CI): 3.5, 12.3], reduced negative behaviour (b =-3.5; 95% CI: -6.6, -0.2) and increases in the extent to which teachers promoted children's social and emotional skills (b = 46.4; 95% CI: 11.0, 81.7). The number of teacher commands was not significantly reduced (b =-2.71; 95% CI: -6.01, 0.59). Significant intervention benefits were found to ratings of child behaviour with an increase in children's appropriate behaviour (b = 5.7, 95% CI: 1.0, 10.8) and in children's interest and enthusiasm (b = 7.2, 95% CI: 0.9, 13.5). Intervention also benefited classroom atmosphere with increases in opportunities provided for children to share and help each other (b = 1.3, 95% CI: 0.5, 2.1) and in teacher warmth (b = 1.3, 95% CI: 0.9, 1.8).
This is a promising approach for improving the emotional climate of Jamaican pre-school classrooms and for improving child behaviour and participation.
在发达国家,涉及教师和/或儿童培训的校内干预已被证明有利于教师的教学实践,并能预防行为问题,提高儿童的社会和情感能力;然而,我们尚未见到来自发展中国家的相关报告。我们开展了一项关于“神奇岁月教师培训计划”以及一个基于“神奇岁月恐龙迪娜课堂课程”中的概念和活动的社会情感技能课程单元的试点研究,以确定这种方法是否适用于牙买加的学前教师和儿童。
牙买加金斯敦的五所幼儿园被随机分配到干预组(3所幼儿园,共15个班级)或对照组(2所幼儿园,共12个班级)。干预措施包括使用“神奇岁月教师培训计划”开展七次全天教师工作坊,并在每个班级补充14节儿童课程。通过对四类教师行为的结构化观察以及四项观察者评分对该项目进行评估:两项儿童行为评分量表和两项课堂氛围评分量表。
干预对教师行为产生了显著益处,积极行为增加(b = 7.9;95%置信区间[CI]:3.5,12.3),消极行为减少(b = -3.5;95% CI:-6.6,-0.2),教师促进儿童社会和情感技能的程度提高(b = 46.4;95% CI:11.0,81.7)。教师指令的数量没有显著减少(b = -2.71;95% CI:-6.01,0.59)。干预对儿童行为评分产生了显著益处,儿童的恰当行为增加(b = 5.7,95% CI:1.0,10.8),儿童的兴趣和热情增加(b = 7.2,95% CI:0.9,13.5)。干预对课堂氛围也有益处,为儿童提供分享和互相帮助的机会增加(b = 1.3,95% CI:0.5,2.1),教师的热情增加(b = 1.3,95% CI:0.9,1.8)。
这是一种很有前景的方法,有助于改善牙买加学前课堂的情感氛围,改善儿童行为和参与度。