Authors:
Emma R Dear, Bryce D McLeod, Nicole M Peterson, Kevin S Sutherland, Michael D Broda, Alex R Dopp & Aaron R Lyon
University of Washington affiliated authors are displayed in bold.
✪ Open Access
Published: January 2024
Read the full text in the open access journal Implementation Research and Practice
Abstract:
Introduction
Due to usability, feasibility, and acceptability concerns, observational treatment fidelity measures are often challenging to deploy in schools. Teacher self-report fidelity measures with specific design features might address some of these barriers. This case study outlines a community-engaged, iterative process to adapt the observational Treatment Integrity for Elementary Settings (TIES-O) to a teacher self-report version designed to assess the use of practices to support children's social-emotional competencies in elementary classrooms.
Method
Cognitive walkthrough interviews were conducted with teachers to improve the usability of the teacher self-report measure, called the Treatment Integrity for Elementary Schools–Teacher Report (TIES-T). Qualitative content analysis was used to extract themes from the interviews and inform changes to the measure.
Results
Increasing clarity and interactive elements in the measure training were the dominant themes, but suggestions for the measure format and jargon were also suggested.
Conclusion
The suggested changes resulted in a brief measure, training, and feedback system designed to support the teacher's use of practices to support children's social-emotional competencies in elementary classrooms. Future research with the TIES-T will examine the score reliability and validity of the measure.
**This abstract is posted with permission under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License**