posted on 2019-03-29, 00:00authored byKelly S. Windsor, Juliann Woods, Ann P. Kaiser, Patricia Synder, Christine Salisbury
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of coaching caregivers to embed both communication and motor outcomes concurrently within daily routines of their infants or toddlers with significant disabilities using Enhanced Milieu Teaching (EMT) strategies. The coaching and embedding practices were part of a multicomponent intervention known as Embedded Practices and Intervention with Caregivers (EPIC). Three children, aged 15 to 23 months with significant disabilities, their caregivers, and an early intervention provider participated in this single case multiple probe design study. Primary dependent variables were caregivers’ number of naturalistic teaching strategies used and rates of correctly embedded instruction for each learning target in each routine. Child motor and communication outcomes were also examined. Results provide initial support for the positive effects of the EPIC approach using EMT strategies to embed intervention on two developmental domains concurrently in caregiver’s daily routines.
Funding
This investigation was supported by a grant (R324A130121) from the U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Special Education Research, to Florida State University, Dr. Juliann Woods (principal investigator).
Windsor, K. S., Woods, J., Kaiser, A. P., Snyder, P., & Salisbury, C. Caregiver-Implemented Intervention for Communication and Motor Outcomes for Infants and Toddlers. Topics in Early Childhood Special Education. doi:10.1177/0271121418815250