Content area

Abstract

With the increased number of schools adopting social-emotional learning (SEL) programming, there is increased emphasis on the role of implementation in obtaining desired outcomes. Despite this, the current knowledge of the active ingredients of SEL programming is lacking, and there is a need to move from a focus on "whether" implementation matters to "what" aspects of implementation matter. To address this gap, the current study utilizes a latent class approach with data from year 1 of a randomized controlled trial of Second Step (61 schools, 321 teachers, over 7300 students). Latent classes of implementation were identified, then used to predict student outcomes. Teachers reported on multiple dimensions of implementation (adherence, dosage, competency), as well as student outcomes. Observational data were also used to assess classroom behavior (academic engagement and disruptive behavior). Results suggest that a three-class model fits the data best, labeled as high-quality, low-engagement, and low-adherence classes. Only the low-engagement class showed significant associations with poorer outcomes, when compared to the high-quality class (not the low-adherence class). Findings are discussed in terms of implications for program development and implementation science more broadly.

Details

Title
What Constitutes High-Quality Implementation of SEL Programs? A Latent Class Analysis of Second Step Implementation
Author
Low, Sabina 1 ; Smolkowski, Keith 2 ; Cook, Clay 3 

 Arizona State University, P.O Box 873701, Tempe, AZ, USA 
 Oregon Research Institute, Eugene, OR, USA 
 University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA 
Pages
981-991
Publication year
2016
Publication date
Nov 2016
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
13894986
e-ISSN
15736695
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1829435331
Copyright
Society for Prevention Research 2016