Fostering the Social Development of Children with Special Educational Needs or Disabilities (SEND) through Dialogue and Interaction: A Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
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- The country where the research was carried out;
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- The sample of participating students, including the number of participants, the type of SEND and their age;
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- The type of research design;
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- The reported educational programme;
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- The main findings from the study.
3.1. Peer Support to Promote the Social Participation of All Students
3.2. Social Skill Training in Academic Instruction
3.3. Increased Social Participation by Using Play Strategies
3.4. Improved Social Skills through the Interactive Use of Technologies
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Effects | Target | Intervention | Population/Context |
---|---|---|---|
Inclusion | Disabilities | Interaction | Children |
Social development or skills | Special needs | Interactive learning environment | Student |
Special educational needs | Interactive learning | Classroom | |
Children or students | Dialogue | School | |
Teachers | Dialogic interaction | Pupil | |
Dialogic teaching and learning |
Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
---|---|
|
|
Intervention | Author (Year) | Country | Sample (Age) | Research Design | Educational Programme | Key Findings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Peer support to promote the social participation of all students | André et al. (2013) | France | 36 children with severe learning difficulties (11–12) | Quantitative | Cooperative learning structure | Helping behaviors of children with disabilities dependant on risk-taking |
Batchelor and Taylor (2005) | Australia | 1 child with a moderate developmental disability (4) | Quantitative | “Stay, Play and Talk” (peer-mediated strategy) | Increase of peer initiations and acceptance | |
Chung and Douglas (2015) | United States of America (USA) | 3 students with ASD (10–12) | Quantitative and Qualitative | Intervention package on interactions | Increase reciprocal interactions and use of SDG (speech-generating devices) | |
Gena (2006) | Greece | 4 students with ASD (3–4) | Quantitative | Behaviour analytic intervention (in dyads or small groups) | Increment of initiations | |
Harper et al. (2008) | USA | 2 students with ASD (8–9) | Quantitative and qualitative | Motivational techniques of Pivotal Response Training through peer-mediated practice | Improvement of social peer interactions, social contact and initiations to play | |
Hundert et al. (2014) | Canada | 3 children with ASD (4–) | Quantitative | Social script training | Increase of peer interaction | |
Kalyva and Avramidis (2005) | UK | 5 preschool boys with ASD (3–4) | Quantitative | “Circle of friends” | Successful responses and initiations of children with autism | |
Kohler et al. (2007) | USA | 1 child with ASD (4) | Quantitative | Buddy skills package | Increased of social interaction and longer exchanges | |
MacKay et al. (2007) | UK | 46 children with ASD (6–16) | Quantitative | Promote key areas of social interactions | Improvement of social skills | |
Mason et al. (2014) | USA | 3 children with ASD (6–8) | Quantitative | Social skills instructional program combined with peer networks | Increment in the frecuency of communicative acts | |
McCurdy and Cole (2014) | USA | 3 boys with ASD (7–11) | Quantitative | Peer support intervention | Reduce off-task behavior | |
Nelson et al. (2007) | USA | 4 children with ASD (4) | Quantitative | Keys to Play (peer mediated teaching strategy) | Increase of unprompted initiations and interest of playing | |
Owen-DeSchryver et al. (2008) | USA | 5 children with selective mutism (7–10) | Quantitative | Peer training intervention | Increment of interaction and responses | |
Schmidt and Stichter (2012) | USA | 3 children with ASD (13) | Quantitative | Peer-mediated intervention (peer training) | Increase of social interaction | |
Weiner (2005) | USA | 3 children with moderate to severe disabilities (6–12) | Quantitative | Peer training on peers’ requests for repair and target students’ unintelligible responses | Increase in requests for repair in response to unintelligible responses and in repair responses of those students | |
Social skill training in academic instruction | Hong et al. (2017) | USA | 2 children with and without disabilities (4–5) | Qualitative and quantitative | Reggio Emilia approach | Increased interest, inclusion, friendship, and empathy toward both children with special needs |
Lane et al. (2015) | USA | 7 children at high risk for antisocial behavior (4–6) | Quantitative | Small Group Instruction (Constant Time Delay procedure) | Acquisition of social information and decrease of disruptive behavior | |
Schnitzer et al. (2007) | Belgium | 48 students with learning disability and behavior problems (11–14) | Quantitative and qualitative | Feuerstein’s Instrumental Enrichment (FIE) | Beneficial effect on social relations and self-regulation | |
Schoger (2006) | USA | 3 students with special needs (6–10) | Qualitative | Reverse Inclusion Programme | Improvements in social interaction behaviors | |
Increased social participation by using play strategies | Stagnitti et al. (2012) | Australia | 19 children attending a specialist school (5–6) | Quantitative | ‘Learn to play’ program | Increase in social interaction and play ability |
Stanton-Chapman and Brown (2015a) | USA | 3 children with disabilities (3) | Quantitative | Playthemes accompanied by storybook | Increase parallel play behaviors | |
Stanton-Chapman and Brown (2015b) | USA | 6 children with disabilities (3) | Quantitative | Playthemes accompanied by storybook | Increase of commenting behaviors, requests for verbal behavior, requests for non-verbal behavior, and non-verbal requests | |
Stanton-Chapman et al. (2012) | USA | 8 children with language delays and/or poor social skills (3–5) | Quantitative | Play themes accompanied by storybook | Increase of initiations with inmediate peer response | |
Tanta et al. (2005) | USA | 5 children with developmental play delays (3–6) | Quantitative | Peer-play (dyads of partners of different levels) | Increment in initiations and responses | |
Harper et al. (2008) * | USA | 2 students with ASD (8–9) | Quantitative and qualitative | Motivational techniques of Pivotal Response Training through peer-mediated practice | Improvement of social peer interactions, social contact and initiations to play | |
Hundert et al. (2014) * | Canada | 3 children with ASD (4–5) | Quantitative | Social script training | Increase of peer interaction | |
Mason et al. (2014) * | USA | 3 children with ASD (6–8) | Quantitative | Social skills instructional program combined with peer networks | Increment in the frecuency of communicative acts | |
Nelson et al. (2007) * | USA | 4 children with ASD (4) | Quantitative | Keys to Play (peer mediated teaching strategy) | Increase of unprompted initiations and interest of playing | |
Improved social skills through the interactive use of technologies | Aalsvoort and Gossé (2007) | Netherlands | 78 preschoolers with intellectual impairments (4–7) | Quantitative | Video-recording and counseling | Elicit competent behavior and other students’ support |
Alzyoudi et al. (2015) | United Arab Emirates (UAE) | 5 children with ASD (5–7) | Quantitative | Video-modelling | Improvement in social skills | |
Hetzroni and Banin (2016) | Israel | 5 middle-school children with mild IDD (11–15) | Quantitative | Observation of video-clips of adequate behaviors, discussion and simulations (in small groups) | Increment of the frequency of usage of social behaviours | |
Kim (2016) | USA | 3 children with ASD (6–9) | Quantitative | Video- modelling | Generalized use of acquired scripted verbalizations and/or play actions | |
Lau et al. (2005) | USA | 3 preschol children with and without disabilities (3–6) | Quantitative | Computer intervention with and without teacher facilitation | Increase of positive interactions, initiations and responses |
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Fernandez-Villardon, A.; Alvarez, P.; Ugalde, L.; Tellado, I. Fostering the Social Development of Children with Special Educational Needs or Disabilities (SEND) through Dialogue and Interaction: A Literature Review. Soc. Sci. 2020, 9, 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci9060097
Fernandez-Villardon A, Alvarez P, Ugalde L, Tellado I. Fostering the Social Development of Children with Special Educational Needs or Disabilities (SEND) through Dialogue and Interaction: A Literature Review. Social Sciences. 2020; 9(6):97. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci9060097
Chicago/Turabian StyleFernandez-Villardon, Aitana, Pilar Alvarez, Leire Ugalde, and Itxaso Tellado. 2020. "Fostering the Social Development of Children with Special Educational Needs or Disabilities (SEND) through Dialogue and Interaction: A Literature Review" Social Sciences 9, no. 6: 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci9060097
APA StyleFernandez-Villardon, A., Alvarez, P., Ugalde, L., & Tellado, I. (2020). Fostering the Social Development of Children with Special Educational Needs or Disabilities (SEND) through Dialogue and Interaction: A Literature Review. Social Sciences, 9(6), 97. https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci9060097