412 results on '"Crowley, P."'
Search Results
2. Investing in Custodial Grandparents: Cost Analysis of the Social Intelligence Program
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D. Max Crowley, Ashley M. Tate, Yoon Sun Hur, Saul Castro, Carol M. Musil, Megan L. Dolbin-MacNab, Patrick O'Neill, Frank J. Infurna, and Gregory Smith
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Rising child welfare costs and a desire to keep kids out of the system have encouraged the use of kinship care--of which custodial grandparents make up the majority of caregivers. Unfortunately, custodial grandparents report greater needs for social and emotional support to successfully care for their grandchildren. Yet, the resources required to provide preventive social-emotional support to these families are unknown. In the wake of the Family First Act and other policy actions to expand preventive services, we undertake a cost analysis of the social intelligence training (SIT) within a randomized controlled trial spanning 48 states of the United States of America. Estimated implementation costs were $90,638 (CI $45,254-186,998) which equated to $255 (CI $127-526) per participant. This dual-generation online approach offers key lessons into not only how to resource social-emotional learning (SEL) prevention for custodial grandparents--but also sheds light on how we might provide universal supports to this population. Child welfare system costs have risen to over $33 billion dollars a year--with nearly half of all spending being the result of out-of-home placement (Rosinsky et al., 2021) Child Welfare Financing SFY 2018: A survey of federal, state, and local expenditures. https://www.childtrends.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/ChildWelfareFinancing_ChildTrends_March2021.pdf). Practitioners, policymakers, and child advocates are seeking solutions for how to both better protect children and manage these growing public costs (Ringel et al., 2018). Improving child welfare outcomes: Balancing investments in prevention and treatment. Rand health quarterly, 7(4)). Further, many extended families seek ways to keep children out of the "system" when parents are unable to care for their offspring (Lin, Children and Youth Services Review 93:203-216, 2018). A strategy used by all of these groups is the use of kinship care arrangements where extended family provides formal or informal care of children. Several important benefits are recognized from kinship care, including providing connections to family members, communities, and culture. Yet, little is known about how social-emotional supports could enhance kinship arrangements, and to date, no studies have systematically evaluated the costs of such supports. In this context, we conduct a cost analysis of such a program--known as social intelligence training.
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- 2024
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3. Long-Term Outcomes after Behavior-Analytic Intervention for Pediatric Feeding Disorders
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Ashley S. Andersen, Jaime G. Crowley-Zalaket, Christopher W. Engler, Jason R. Zeleny, Kathryn M. Peterson, Aida G. Miles, and Cathleen C. Piazza
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Many children with autism spectrum disorder experience feeding difficulties that can lead to increased health risks (e.g., severe nutrition deficiencies, obesity-related illnesses) if left untreated. Intensive feeding programs that use behavior-analytic interventions have reported positive outcomes for treating challenging behavior associated with pediatric feeding disorders at discharge and up to 1 year post discharge. Whether these children achieve and maintain long-term goals is unknown. The purpose of the current study was to evaluate outcomes of behavior-analytic intervention for pediatric feeding disorders among children with and without autism spectrum disorder in an intensive feeding program post discharge. Caregivers of former patients reported on the positive and negative impact of the program and their child's growth and diet variety at follow-up. 85% of caregivers reported the program had a positive impact. Increases in height-for-age z scores were significant from admission to discharge from the intensive program, and progress in growth and diet variety remained the same or improved for most children at follow-up. Results suggest that behavior-analytic intervention in an intensive feeding program produced positive short- and long-term outcomes for children and their families.
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- 2024
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4. 'The Numbers Are There but the Attention Is Elsewhere': An Analysis of the Boyer Report
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Saralyn McKinnon-Crowley and Aaron W. Voyles
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A 1998 report from the Boyer Commission called "Reinventing Undergraduate Education: A Blueprint for America's Research Universities" issued a series of directives, suggestions, and critiques concerning the then-current state of undergraduate education at research universities. The document caused a minor media firestorm in the higher education and national outlets. This paper will analyze the report, the media responses to the report, and the academic articles inspired by it through the lens of the neoliberal economic models influencing higher education, encapsulated in the titular quote from the report regarding deficits in undergraduate education. We argue that neoliberal concepts infiltrated the discourse surrounding undergraduate education and provide the underpinnings for a value-added perspective on undergraduate education. We describe the historical circumstances influencing the report, conduct a poststructural analysis of the report using the lens of neoliberalism, and reflect upon the impact of the report for contemporary student affairs practitioners and faculty collaboration.
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- 2024
5. Behavioral Parent Training via Telehealth for Autistic Children in Rural Appalachia: A Mixed Methods Feasibility Study
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Kait Gould, Ryan J. Martin, Summer Bottini, Jaime Crowley-Zalaket, Ainsley Losh, Meka McCammon, Jennifer R. Wolgemuth, and Cynthia Anderson
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Behavioral parent training (BPT) is an empirically supported approach for addressing the behavioral concerns of autistic children. However, many families face barriers to accessing BPT. Adapting BPT via telehealth technology may improve access for families, especially those living in rural regions. This study aims to evaluate the implementation of a Research Units in Behavioral Intervention (RUBI), a BPT program for autistic children, via telehealth to families living in the Appalachian region of the United States. We employed a mixed-methods approach to examine the feasibility and potential efficacy of implementing the Research Units in Behavioral Intervention Autism Network parent training via telehealth (RUBI-T) with seven rural parent-child dyads. RUBI-T was found to be feasible and satisfactory to parents and community providers. RUBI-T also shows promise for reducing children's disruptive behavior, improving children's adaptive skills, and reducing parent stress, although a more thorough evaluation of its efficacy is warranted. The limitations and implications of the results are discussed.
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- 2024
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6. Problems with 'Problem Behavior': A Secondary Systematic Review of Intervention Research on Transition-Age Autistic Youth
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Kristen Bottema-Beutel, Rachael McKinnon, Sarah Mohiuddin, Shannon Crowley LaPoint, and So Yoon Kim
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In this secondary systematic review of single-case and controlled group design intervention studies conducted with transition-age autistic youth, we examined features of 48 studies with 273 participants that measured at least one "problem behavior" outcome (Prospero registration number: 231764). We searched 11 databases for relevant studies, and the final search date was November 2022. Our primary aims were to determine how problem behaviors were defined and selected for reduction, how functions were determined, and the interventions used to address them. Studies were coded and codes were tabulated and converted to percentages to answer each research question. Thirty-eight percent of studies defined problem behavior, and 88% of studies implemented behavioral strategies to reduce problem behaviors. Behaviors with low potential for harm constituted the majority of the 67 outcome variables (61%), while behaviors with high potential for harm were a minority (39%). The most common intervention target was stereotypic behavior. Fewer than half of studies: reported procedures for selecting behaviors, reported procedures to determine behavior function, or ascribed functions to behaviors. We were unable to report on some demographic features of participants (e.g. race/ethnicity) because they were rarely reported in primary studies. We conclude that problem behavior is poorly conceptualized in this research.
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- 2024
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7. Assessing Fear, Embarrassment, and Disgust in Colonoscopy: The Development of Measurement Instruments and Psychometric Evidence
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Wei Peng, Jocelyn McKinnon-Crowley, Qian Huang, and Bingjing Mao
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Background: Avoidance of colonoscopy is often associated with fear, embarrassment, and disgust aroused in screening procedures. However, each emotion can be linked to different challenges faced by patients. More research is needed to evaluate and address the causes of these respective emotions. Aim: The purpose of this study was to develop and assess the scales of three negative emotions (i.e., fear, embarrassment, and disgust) caused by specific issues in colonoscopy screening. Method: The measurement items were developed based on multiple common barriers in colonoscopy screening procedures. An online sample of 232 adults aged 45-75 was recruited from Amazon Mechanical Turk to test the scales. Explorative and confirmatory factor analyses were conducted to validate the measurement models. Results: Psychometric evidence demonstrated the factor structures of three negative emotions. Each emotional factor was caused by unique combinations of barriers in the preparation, screening, and recovery stages of colonoscopy. Most of the emotional factors were associated with attitudes and screening intention. Conclusion: This study showed different dimensions of negative emotions and their underlying causes in colonoscopy. These findings will help assess specific causes of negative emotions in colonoscopy and develop effective interventions to improve screening uptake.
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- 2024
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8. World-Class Universities Cut off from the West: Russian Higher Education and the Reversal of the Internationalisation Norm?
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Anne Crowley-Vigneau, Yelena Kalyuzhnova, and Andrey Baykov
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The Western-style internationalisation of Russian universities, which guided the evolution of the country's higher education sector for over three decades, has been challenged by Western sanctions following the 2022 Russian 'Special military operation in Ukraine'. The authors show through the prism of constructivist theory how the norm on the internationalisation of higher education characterised by the strive for Westernised world-class universities was adopted and then came to unravel in Russia. A qualitative case study based on 42 expert interviews and an analysis of political discourse and legal documents reveals how the key features of the internationalisation of Russian universities are being challenged. The authors contribute to the expert literature the notion of 'norm reversal', defined as the process whereby an institutionalised and internalised international norm is 'cancelled' in a specific country. The paper shows that the reversal in Russian higher education, which was initially 'circumstantial' is becoming 'intentional', with legal documents being drawn up to accelerate and claim ownership of it.
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- 2024
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9. Doctoral Student Perceptions of a Project-Based Learning Approach in an Instructional Design Course
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McCall, Madelon, Shelton, Ryann N., Crowley, Brandy N., and Ritter, Kenley
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The purpose of this single case study was to determine how a project-based learning approach to instructional design supported education doctorate students' acquisition of new knowledge and practical application of skills in their current and future professions. Participants included 58 students in an online EdD instructional design course. We found that 72% of students credited the design project for scaffolding their learning about instructional design and 80% saw an immediate application of the instructional design project to their current professional roles. Further, 93% of students could foresee the application of new knowledge and skills to future professional opportunities. This study has implications for those who teach EdD courses and are interested in providing a project-based approach to content acquisition and teaching skills students can apply in their professional organizations, both current and future.
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- 2023
10. Money Matters: How Social Class Shapes Students' Understandings of Financing Their Education
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Saralyn McKinnon-Crowley, Ashli Duncan-Buchanan, Eliza Epstein, Huriya Jabbar, and Lauren Schudde
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Higher education is increasingly expensive, and access disparities by race and social class exist. Yet, we lack nuance in the scholarly literature about students' understandings of how they finance their college education. We examine how class-based differences influence how students finance college education. We draw on concepts from economic sociology and sensemaking to examine how class backgrounds shape students' meaning-making of finance and funding their college education. Through interviews with 56 community college students, we examine what money means to students and how that varies across classes, with implications for transfer decisions and outcomes. We surface important implications for students' behaviors and decisions in college.
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- 2023
11. Time to Talk: Facilitating Climate Change Conversations in Rural Pennsylvania
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Mary Ann Steiner, Karen Knutson, and Kevin Crowley
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Many people living in rural areas are aware of the impacts of climate change and often have climate beliefs that are aligned with the scientific consensus. However, climate change conversations in rural communities may be seen as divisive, political, and potential sources of conflict in the community. We describe a rural/urban collaboration intended to break the silence around climate conversations that could occur in informal and formal educational settings in rural Pennsylvania. We conducted pop up informal learning experiences using a climate card tool at a public night market, a community-college canning workshop, and with high-school Envirothon teams. The cards and facilitation approaches were aligned with local knowledge and interest and provided just enough information to introduce a discussion topic without being too didactic. Climate cards provided support for rural educators to create and customize learning experiences for different interests, lived experiences, and values.
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- 2024
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12. From 'Let Me Show You Something Cool' to 'What Do You Notice?' Preparing College Interns for Floor Facilitation in a Natural History Museum
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Preeti Gupta, A. Perez, N. Martinez, K. Knutson, K. Crowley, and R. Chaffee
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The use of facilitators to engage visitors in conversations at collections-based institutions has the potential to greatly impact and deepen visitor experience. The job requires the development of complex skills across specific strands of study. In this article, we share details on the strands of study in the training of youth floor facilitators from diverse backgrounds for work in a collections-based museum. This training program has been developed over several years. In this article, we review lessons learned, discuss issues we continue to grapple with, and recommend opportunities for further research for practitioners and researchers.
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- 2024
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13. Turning Student Teachers into Claim Makers: Developing the Pedagogical Content Knowledge of Novice Teachers with the Persuasive Claim Framework
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Ryan Lewis, Kathy Swan, and Ryan Crowley
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As preservice teachers navigate the emotional and physical stress that teaching demands, they face new pressures ranging from curriculum disputes to a revolving door of political and social policies that attempt to redefine social studies. As such, social studies educators and methods instructors have struggled to develop a common language and set of expectations around what it is that we "do" in the classroom. Educators have developed tools and rationales that pursue a common language around the "what" and "why" of social studies teaching. The "C3 Framework" and instructional models like the "Inquiry Design Model" (IDM) place inquiry and argumentation at the center of the conversation. Yet there is often a disconnect between what teachers say is important and what they actually do in the classroom. In this article, the authors argue that the use of inquiry-based tools like the "Persuasive Claim Framework" represents an effective way to steer teachers toward inquiry-based pedagogies. This conclusion is born out of a semester-long study of preservice teachers who centered claim-writing at the heart of their instruction. The results reveal that the use of the "Persuasive Claim Framework" prompted student teachers to develop increasingly complex strategies and tasks to support student claim-writing and inquiry. Furthermore, the Framework led to new ways of conceptualizing the progress of preservice teachers.
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- 2024
14. A Systematic Review of Social Validation Procedures in Intervention Research with Transition-Age Autistic Youth
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Kristen Bottema-Beutel, Shannon Crowley LaPoint, So Yoon Kim, Sarah Mohiuddin, Qun Yu, and Rachael McKinnon
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In this secondary analysis of a previously conducted systematic review, we analyze social validity assessments in intervention research for transition-age autistic youth. Social validity is concerned with the acceptability of the intervention goals, the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention procedures, and the perceived importance of the intervention outcomes. We found that although just over half of intervention studies assessed some aspect of social validity, only 43% of those studies examined all three dimensions. There were several shortcomings of the social validation procedures, including a lack of psychometric validation for quantitatively scored questionnaires and a failure to describe qualitative procedures for analyzing open-ended questions. These shortcomings likely explain why interpretations of social validity assessments were nearly universally positive.
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- 2024
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15. 'If They Were White and Middle Class': The Possessive Investment in Whiteness in U.S. History Textbooks' Portrayal of 20th-Century Social Democratic Reforms
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Bonnie Lewis and Ryan M. Crowley
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The authors analyzed three Advanced Placement U.S. History textbooks' narratives of U.S. 20th century social democratic policies (e.g. New Deal, G.I. Bill, pro-suburbanization policies) using Lipsitz's "possessive investment in whiteness" as a theoretical framework. The authors found texts portrayed the exclusion of Black populations from policy benefits and, to a lesser extent, the disparate benefits conveyed to white communities. However, discussions of racial disparities were segregated from primary narratives that conveyed race neutrality in policy implementation. Additionally, texts obscured white benefits by framing the racist outcomes of the policies as unavoidable. This work contributes to ongoing critical analyses of official curriculum artifacts like textbooks and standards documents by noting how they manage to include, yet exclude, critical, structural understandings of U.S. history.
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- 2024
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16. Don't Forget the Tasks: Why Formative Tasks Are Key to Deliberation
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Bonnie Lewis, Kathy Swan, and Ryan M. Crowley
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Deliberation and inquiry can go hand-in-hand. Inquiry-based learning calls on teachers to facilitate student-led discovery, something that can only happen when students ask questions and weigh possible answers before settling on a plausible and evidentiary answer. Teaching through inquiry is about setting students up to wrestle with the issue at hand using sources so that they can communicate their conclusions. For this outcome to happen, deliberation must be front and center in the progression from compelling question to summative performance task. In this article, the authors discuss how a sequence of tasks supports meaningful deliberation within an inquiry. Specifically, they look at an upper elementary inquiry that features a cost-benefit analysis on a dam project in Tennessee.
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- 2024
17. Critical Thinking for Transformative Praxis in Teacher Education: Music, Media and Information Literacy, and Social Studies in the United States
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Richard Miller, Katrina Liu, Christopher B. Crowley, and Min Yu
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The notion and practice of critical thinking (CT) has moved from its speculative formation by John Dewey to a standard element in teacher education curricula and standards. In the process, CT has narrowed its focus to the analysis and articulation of logical thought, and lost transformative value. In this paper, we examine the conception and implementation of CT in three teacher education domains primarily in the United States--music, media and information literacy, and social studies--asking how CT has deformed education in those domains, and how domain-specific approaches could reinvigorate CT. We further suggest refocusing the purpose of CT in teacher education on accomplishing transformative education for equity in school and society, by implementing a critically reflective, transformative praxis based on the insights of domain-specific approaches to CT.
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- 2024
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18. A Review of Youth Mental Health Curricula in Peer-Reviewed Studies Addressing Access, Equity, and Belonging
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Lobenstein, Monica M., Park-Mroch, Jennifer, Crowley, Lana Lichfield, Bean, Coley, and Voss, Maren Wright
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The goal of this literature review was to identify evidence-based curricula that support youth mental health with special attention to inclusion of access, equity, and belonging (AEB). Four databases were searched for peer-reviewed articles published between 2010 and 2019 related to youth mental health curricula. A total of 1446 articles were identified, and 171 articles underwent a full-text review. Of the 61 curricula identified, 44% addressed AEB to some extent and 65% showed program effectiveness. Four programs were recommended (Sources of Strength, Teen Mental Health First Aid, Dynamic Mindfulness, and Youth Mental Health First Aid) and eight conditionally recommended.
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- 2022
19. Museums and Community-Based Organizations Partnering to Support Family Literacy
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Knutson, Karen and Crowley, Kevin
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The William Penn Foundation launched Philadelphia's Informal Learning Initiative (ILI) to support the development of literacy-rich programming for families with children aged 3 to 9. The initiative was designed as a network of partnerships in which a cultural organization--usually a museum--paired with one or more, community-based organizations (CBOs) to design literacy-rich informal learning experiences for caregivers and children. The initiative involved 11 cultural partners and 15 CBOs. Programs exposed three- to nine-year-old children and their families to literacy practices in the context of original artwork, live animals, science experiments, natural settings, new foods, and cultural or historical sites. Programming was delivered at no cost to families, often in community settings such as recreation centers or school auditoriums. Convenient times and locations, as well as snack or meal options, supported family participation, as did book giveaways, take-home activity packs, and special museum visits. As the evaluation team for ILI, the authors structured their work to support the development of a networked community of practice, collecting data for improvement and exploring the best ways to measure impact across projects. They used a structured observation protocol and CBO staff- and educator-conducted interviews with children and caregivers in their programs to determine ILI programming's impactfulness. The study aimed to examine how museums can connect to collective impact efforts in literacy and how informal learning programs can be reoriented to better respond to community needs. Findings from the study and recommendations for museum-CBO partnerships are discussed.
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- 2022
20. Transforming Policy Standards to Promote Equity and Developmental Success among Latinx Children and Youth. Social Policy Report. Volume 35, Number 1
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Society for Research in Child Development, Aceves, Lorena, Crowley, Daniel Max, Rincon, Brenda, and Bravo, Diamond Y.
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The main goal of this social policy report is to propose a holistic approach for promoting developmental success among Latinx children and youth. This report highlights the need to 1) redefine success and 2) account for intersectional inequalities. First, the current demographic landscape of Latinx students is presented to showcase the variability in experiences among Latinx children and youth. We review past policies (across the last two and current U.S. Administrations and within the state of California), educational programs (e.g., McNair scholars' program, AVID), and theoretical frameworks (within developmental and sociocultural disciplines). Next, we introduce a nuanced holistic approach for promoting Latinx children and youth's developmental success, underscoring the integration of factors within the sociocultural, family, and individual domains. Finally, this report provides accessible recommendations for policymakers, researchers, and practitioners to effectively promote equity and developmental success among diverse groups of Latinx children and youth.
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- 2022
21. Designing an Open-Source Interactive Simulation of Stokes' Law
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Shane V. Crowley
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This paper outlines the design of an interactive simulation of Stokes' law, which is used frequently in the study of particle sedimentation and flotation. The software application includes dynamic visualizations and statistical outputs. Descriptions of how the simulation can be used in a teaching context are provided. The application and its source code are made freely available for inspection and modification by educators and students. As a "translucent box", the inner workings of the application are exposed to the interested user. It is suggested that the approach outlined can serve as a sustainable model for the development and preservation of software for science education.
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- 2023
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22. Celebrating and Preserving Educational Technology History in Canada: The AMTEC History Project
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Janes, Diane, Ives, Cindy, and Crowley, Chris
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This paper examines the roots of the Association for Media and Technology in Education (AMTEC) in Canada and its connections to global educational technology and media organizations including the Association for Educational Communications and Technology (AECT). The AMTEC History Project, which is preserving memories, voices and documents related to the field of educational technology in Canada, celebrates the 50th anniversary of AMTEC in the context of the 100th anniversary of AECT. Generations of AECT leaders had a substantive influence on the history of AMTEC. Interviews with memory keepers as part of this history project revealed the importance of communication, collaboration, networking, persistence, and a learning mindset for those engaged as educational technologists, as they navigated change. Students, academics, and practitioners of educational technology may benefit from lessons learned by the Canadian pioneers of multi-media instruction and research collected in this project.
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- 2023
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23. World-Class Universities in Russia: A Contested Norm and Its Implementation
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Crowley-Vigneau, Anne, Kalyuzhnova, Yelena, and Baykov, Andrey
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So-called 'world-class universities' emerged on the global higher education scene following the Second World War. Their development in countries around the world, particularly since the early 2000s, has evolved into an international norm, although not without debate and contestation. This paper applies Constructivist theory to reflect on how local contestation affected the implementation of this norm of world-class universities in Russia, at a time when the internationalization of higher education was a national priority (i.e. before the beginning of hostilities in Ukraine). The authors employ process tracing to follow the norm from its emergence on the international stage to its contemporary adoption by Russia with Project 5-100, drawing on a case study based on 22 targeted expert interviews to identify the types and roots of resistance in Russian universities. The findings indicate that Russian contestation reflects in most cases difficulties adapting to new requirements and the fear of being left behind rather than an overall rejection of the international norm of world-class universities. The study reveals that international actors are essential not only to norm diffusion on the international stage, but also during domestic norm implementation as they are instrumental in overcoming contestation.
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- 2023
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24. Website Continuous Improvement Plan. Brief
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Region 5 Comprehensive Center, Flynn, Jennifer, and Crowley, Rachel
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An effective website continuously improves to meet its users' needs, constantly measures progress, and implements incremental changes toward desired goals. In the summer of 2020, the client requested that the Region 5 Comprehensive Center develop a plan to continuously improve a new website. On this website, the client teachers can upload, download, comment upon, and share instructional materials with other teachers. This continuous improvement plan, describes how feedback from teachers can improve the website's efficiency and advance the client's goals for a new initiative. As a result of this plan, the client will be able to identify continuous, incremental changes to make to the website based upon site analytics, performance metrics, and direct feedback from teachers. The plan was designed to be implemented by a single individual (i.e., the client staff member running the website) who may not have access to additional staff or funding. This brief describes four simple steps of continuous improvement for a website: (1) identifying goals for the website; (2) identifying sources of feedback; (3) regularly obtaining feedback; and (4) using the feedback in meaningful ways.
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- 2021
25. Using Peer Assisted Learning to Improve Academic Engagement and Progression of First Year Online Law Students
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Crowley-Cyr, Lynda and Hevers, James
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The University of Southern Queensland's online study environment continues to grow with over 16,000 students studying online. Pre-Covid-19, online enrolments typically represent around 67% of all students studying at USQ. This article usefully analyses quantitative data in order to evaluate the effectiveness of the pilot of an online peer-assisted learning program for first-year Law students. The article asks whether a customised online Meet-Up program can objectively enhance student engagement and academic performance in a first-year law course. Results from the pilot were positive and are a productive contribution to the literature on online peer-assisted learning.
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- 2021
26. Making Choices and Reducing Risk (MCARR): School Counseling Primary Prevention of Substance Use
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Foss-Kelly, Louisa L., Generali, Margaret M., and Crowley, Michael J.
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The consequences of adolescent drug and alcohol use may be serious and far-reaching, forecasting problematic use or addictive behaviors into adulthood. School counselors are particularly well suited to understand the needs of the school community and to seamlessly deliver sustainable substance use prevention. This pilot study with 46 ninth-grade students investigates the impact of the Making Choices and Reducing Risk (MCARR) program, a drug and alcohol use prevention program for the school setting. The MCARR curriculum addresses general knowledge of substances and their related risks, methods for evaluating risk, and skills for avoiding or coping with drug and alcohol use. Using a motivational interviewing framework, MCARR empowers students to choose freely how they wish to behave in relation to drugs and alcohol and to contribute to the health of others in the school community. The authors hypothesized that the implementation of the MCARR curriculum would influence student attitudes, knowledge, and use of substances. Results suggest that the MCARR had a beneficial impact on student attitudes and knowledge. Further, no appreciable increases in substance use during the program were observed. Initial results point to the promise of program feasibility and further research with larger samples including assessment of longitudinal impact.
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- 2021
27. Cutting through the Noise during Crisis by Enhancing the Relevance of Research to Policymakers
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Scott, Taylor, Pugel, Jessica, Fernandes, Mary, Cruz, Katherine, Long, Elizabeth C., Giray, Cagla, Storace, Rachel, and Crowley, D. Max
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Background: It is widely recognised that policymakers use research deemed relevant, yet little is understood about ways to enhance perceived relevance of research evidence. Observing policymakers' access of research online provides a pragmatic way to investigate predictors of relevance. Aims and objectives: This study investigates a range of relevance indicators including committee assignments, public statements, issue prevalence, or the policymaker's name or district. Methods: In a series of four rapid-cycle randomised control trials (RCTs), the present work systematically explores science communication strategies by studying indicators of perceived relevance. State legislators, state staffers, and federal staffers were emailed fact sheets on issues of COVID (Trial 1, N = 3403), exploitation (Trial 2, N = 6846), police violence (Trial 3, N = 3488), and domestic violence (Trial 4, N = 3888). Findings: Across these trials, personalising the subject line to the legislator's name or district and targeting recipients based on committee assignment consistently improved engagement. Mentions of subject matter in public statements was inconsistently associated, and state-level prevalence of the issue was largely not associated with email engagement behaviour. Discussion and conclusions: Together, these results indicate a benefit of targeting legislators based on committee assignments and of personalising the subject line with legislator information. This work further operationalises practical indicators of personal relevance and demonstrates a novel method of how to test science communication strategies among policymakers. Building enduring capacity for testing science communication will improve tactics to cut through the noise during times of political crisis.
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- 2023
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28. An Evaluation of Intervention Research for Transition-Age Autistic Youth
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Bottema-Beutel, Kristen, LaPoint, Shannon Crowley, Kim, So Yoon, Mohiuddin, Sarah, Yu, Qun, and McKinnon, Rachael
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In this systematic evaluation of intervention research for transition-age autistic youth, we examined quality indicators in 193 group and single-case design intervention studies, which tested effects on 1258 outcomes. Behaviorally based interventions were the most common intervention type. We found significant threats to internal validity for the majority of studies, including inadequate randomization, unmasked assessors, and too few data points to infer functional relations. The majority of outcomes were measured in contexts similar to the intervention and were conceptualized as behaviors directly addressed by intervention procedures. As such, they are of unclear long-term utility for autistic people entering adulthood. Adverse events were rarely reported. We suggest several avenues for improving intervention research for this age group.
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- 2023
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29. The Ethics Review and the Humanities and Social Sciences: Disciplinary Distinctions in Ethics Review Processes
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Carniel, Jessica, Hickey, Andrew, Southey, Kim, Brömdal, Annette, Crowley-Cyr, Lynda, Eacersall, Douglas, Farmer, Will, Gehrmann, Richard, Machin, Tanya, and Pillay, Yosheen
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Ethics review processes are frequently perceived as extending from codes and protocols rooted in biomedical disciplines. As a result, many researchers in the humanities and social sciences (HASS) find these processes to be misaligned, if not outrightly obstructive to their research. This leads some scholars to advocate against HASS participation in institutional review processes as they currently stand, or in their entirety. While ethics review processes can present a challenge to HASS researchers, these are not insurmountable and, in fact, present opportunities for ethics review boards (ERBs) to mediate their practices to better attend to the concerns of the HASS disciplines. By highlighting the potential "value" of the ethics review process in recognising the nuances and specificity across different forms of research, this article explores the generative possibilities of greater collaboration between HASS researchers and ERBs. Remaining cognisant of the epistemic and methodological differences that mark different disciplinary formations in turn will benefit the ethical conduct of "all" researchers.
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- 2023
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30. Cost-Effectiveness of Consultation for a Daily Report Card Intervention: Comparing In-Person and Online Implementation Strategies
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Owens, Julie Sarno, Margherio, Samantha M., Lee, Mary, Evans, Steven W., Crowley, D. Max, Coles, Erika K., and Mixon, Clifton S.
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Teachers can implement a high quality Daily Report Card (DRC) intervention when they receive face-to-face consultation or interactive online supports. Yet, it is unclear which method is most cost-effective. Using an ingredients-based approach and societal perspective, we examined costs and cost-effectiveness (compared to typical practice) of three implementation strategies (face-to-face standard consultation, face-to-face enhanced consultation, interactive online supports) with 112 elementary school teachers. Teachers received consultation for DRC implementation with one student with or at risk for ADHD. Over 2 months, we collected data on teachers' implementation and changes in student behaviors. Regarding cost per student, enhanced consultation was the most costly ($864), followed by standard consultation ($634) and interactive online supports ($307). Regarding cost-effectiveness (costs required to achieve the desired effect beyond typical practice), interactive online supports were the most cost-effective followed by enhanced consultation and standard consultation. We discuss implications for research and maximizing outcomes given dollars spent. [This is the online version of an article published in "Journal of Education and Psychological Consultation" (ISSN 1532-768X).]
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- 2020
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31. Financial Aid Access during the 2020 Pandemic Period
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McKinnon-Crowley, Saralyn
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During the 2020 period of the COVID-19 pandemic, higher education delivery changed drastically. Using document analysis and interviews with staff and students, in this article I address how the practice of financial aid changed during the COVID-19 pandemic. Staff reported that these changes created problems with technology and radically increased workloads. Student stories indicate how changes in financial aid practice could exclude low-income students, and how access to certain technologies delayed students' receipt of aid.
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- 2023
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32. What Can Women Teach Us about Equality? An Inquiry-Based Curricular Approach to a Gender and Women's Studies Course
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Cartner, Christy, Swan, Kathy, and Crowley, Ryan
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In 2019, Kentucky unanimously adopted new social studies standards featuring a version of the C3 Framework's inquiry arc, joining dozens of other states with inquiry practices embedded in their standards. The state legislature revised them in 2022 by passing the "Teaching American Principles Act." The Kentucky law requires teachers to incorporate 24 "fundamental American documents and speeches" into their curriculum and to adhere to 11 directives regarding historical trends and their modern impact. The legislation allows teachers to discuss the historical oppression of certain groups but requires teachers to emphasize that all Americans can succeed if they are committed to "seizing that opportunity through hard work, pursuit of education, and good citizenship." In this article, the authors describe an inquiry-based approach to a Gender and Women's Studies (GWS) course at Bryan Station High School in Lexington, Kentucky, designed to confront contemporary women's issues. The course consists of a curricular loop of six inquiries developed with the Inquiry Design Model. The inquiries push students to consider the larger conceptual question that guides the course: "What can women teach us about equality?"
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- 2023
33. Historically Black College and University Faculty's Perception of Commission on Sport Management Accreditation and Perceived Barriers
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Rennae Williams Stowe and Charles Crowley
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Program-level accreditation ensures that students will be equipped with the knowledge and skills needed to be successful in a career that is based on industry standards. Numerous researchers have reported the cost and benefits of pursuing specialized accreditation in different disciplines. There is a dearth of research related to specialized accreditation at historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in general and none specifically for sport management accreditation. Therefore, this study aims to fill the void of research on the perception of the Commission on Sport Management Accreditation (COSMA) by faculty and administrators at HBCUs. The researchers were given permission to utilize an existing survey. Results of this study found that the top benefits of accreditation were accountability for program improvements and recognition as a superior (elite) program/institution. Cost and redundancy were reported as major barriers to COSMA. Although HBCUs must deal with fewer resources and a lower budget than most predominantly White institutions (PWI), they are evaluated using the same accreditation standards as PWIs. Therefore, if HBCU sport management programs are going to seek accreditation with COSMA, they must be understood within the context in which they are operating--and how that may be different from PWIs.
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- 2023
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34. Psychosis Symptom Trajectories across Childhood and Adolescence in Three Longitudinal Studies: An Integrative Data Analysis with Mixture Modeling
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Musci, Rashelle J., Kush, Joseph M., Masyn, Katherine E., Esmaeili, Masoumeh Amin, Susukida, Ryoko, Goulter, Natalie, McMahon, Robert, Eddy, J. Mark, Ialongo, Nicholas S., Tolan, Patrick, Godwin, Jennifer, Bierman, Karen L., Coie, John D., Crowley, D. Max, Dodge, Kenneth A., Greenberg, Mark T., Lochman, John E., McMahon, Robert J., Pinderhughes, Ellen E., and Wilcox, Holly C.
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Psychotic-like experiences (PLEs) are common throughout childhood, and the presence of these experiences is a significant risk factor for poor mental health later in development. Given the association of PLEs with a broad number of mental health diagnoses, these experiences serve as an important malleable target for early preventive interventions. However, little is known about these experiences across childhood. While these experiences may be common, longitudinal measurement in non-clinical settings is not. Therefore, in order to explore longitudinal trajectories of PLEs in childhood, we harmonized three school-based randomized control trials with longitudinal follow-up to identify heterogeneity in trajectories of these experiences. In an integrative data analysis (IDA) using growth mixture modeling, we identified three latent trajectory classes. One trajectory class was characterized by persistent PLEs, one was characterized by high initial probabilities but improving across the analytic period, and one was characterized by no reports of PLEs. Compared to the class without PLEs, those in the improving class were more likely to be male and have higher levels of aggressive and disruptive behavior at baseline. In addition to the substantive impact this work has on PLE research, we also discuss the methodological innovation as it relates to IDA. This IDA demonstrates the complexity of pooling data across multiple studies to estimate longitudinal mixture models.
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- 2023
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35. Beyond Criticism of Ethics Review Boards: Strategies for Engaging Research Communities and Enhancing Ethical Review Processes
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Hickey, Andrew, Davis, Samantha, Farmer, Will, Dawidowicz, Julianna, Moloney, Clint, Lamont-Mills, Andrea, Carniel, Jess, Pillay, Yosheen, Akenson, David, Brömdal, Annette, Gehrmann, Richard, Mills, Dean, Kolbe-Alexander, Tracy, Machin, Tanya, Reich, Suzanne, Southey, Kim, Crowley-Cyr, Lynda, Watanabe, Taiji, Davenport, Josh, Hirani, Rohit, King, Helena, Perera, Roshini, Williams, Lucy, Timmins, Kurt, Thompson, Michael, Eacersall, Douglas, and Maxwell, Jacinta
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A growing body of literature critical of ethics review boards has drawn attention to the processes used to determine the ethical merit of research. Citing criticism on the bureaucratic nature of ethics review processes, this literature provides a useful provocation for (re)considering how the ethics review might be enacted. Much of this criticism focuses on how ethics review boards "deliberate," with particular attention given to the lack of transparency and opportunities for researcher recourse that characterise ethics review processes. Centered specifically on the conduct of ethics review boards convened within university settings, this paper draws on these inherent criticisms to consider the ways that ethics review boards might enact more communicative and deliberative practices. Outlining a set of principles against which ethics review boards might establish strategies for engaging with researchers and research communities, this paper draws attention to how "Deliberative communication," "Engagement with researchers" and the "Distribution of responsibility" for the ethics review might be enacted in the day-to-day practice of the university human ethics review board. This paper develops these themes via a conceptual lens derived from Habermas' (The theory of communicative action. Volume 1: Reason and the rationalization of society, 1984) articulation of 'communicative action' and Fraser's (Social Text, 25(26), 56-80, 1990) consideration of 'strong publics' to cast consideration of the role that human ethics review boards might play in supporting university research cultures. "Deliberative communication," "Engagement with researchers" and the "Distribution of responsibility" provide useful conceptual prompts for considering how ethics review boards might undertake their work.
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- 2022
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36. Beyond the Comfort Zone: A Guide to Supervising Qualitative Undergraduate Psychology Dissertations for Quantitative Researchers
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Freeman, Leanne, Brooks, Joanna, Crowley, Colm, Elmi-Glennan, Clare, Gordon-Finlayson, Alasdair, McDermott, Hilary, and Seymour-Smith, Sarah
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The Teaching Qualitative Psychology Group (TQP) is a group of experienced academics supporting the sharing of best practice in the teaching and supervision of qualitative research methods in psychology. In this paper the group share their knowledge and practice suggestions with a specific focus on supporting academics who do not come from a qualitative research background, but who are supervising qualitative dissertations. This paper will explore why quantitative researchers may want to supervise qualitative dissertations and suggest ways in which this methodological shift might be managed well in the context of the undergraduate project as well as some practical advice for a valuable supervision experience.
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- 2020
37. Taking a School-Based Child Sexual Abuse Prevention Program to Scale: A Cost Analysis
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Shipe, Stacey L., Guastaferro, Kate, Noll, Jennie G., Connell, Christian M., Morgan, Paul L., and Crowley, D. Max
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Cost analyses are used to determine overall costs of implementing evidence-based programming and may help decision makers determine how best to allocate finite resources. Child sexual abuse (CSA), regularly viewed as a human rights violation, is also a public health concern estimated to impact 27% of females and 5% of males by age 18. Universal, school-based CSA programs are one prevailing prevention strategy. However, there are no known cost analyses of school-based CSA prevention programming, thereby limiting potential scalability. Using the ingredients method, this cost analysis presents the findings of implementing "Safe Touches," an evidence-based universal prevention program, across four sites (i.e., counties) in one mid-Atlantic state. Reaching a total of 14,235 s grade students, results indicate an average cost of $43 per student, an average classroom cost of $859, an average district cost of $10,637, and an average site cost of $154,243. There was a noted decrease in costs when more students were reached, suggesting a need to focus efforts on bolstering the reach of implementation efforts. Sensitivity analyses explored variations in implementation constraints such as personnel and facilities suggesting a range of per-student costs (lower-bound per-student cost = $34; upper-bound per-student cost = $64). Findings presented herein may be used to inform future universal CSA prevention efforts by providing detailed information about the costs of large-scale implementation of an evidence-based program among elementary-aged children.
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- 2022
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38. Trends and Opportunities for Bridging Prevention Science and US Federal Policy
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Scott, J. Taylor, Prendergast, Sarah, Demeusy, Elizabeth, McGuire, Kristina, and Crowley, Max
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Prevention science sheds light on complex social policy problems, yet its social impact cannot reach full potential without the uptake of research evidence by policymakers. This mixed-methods study examined the US federal legislation pertaining to justice-involved youth to reveal opportunities for strengthening the use of prevention science in legislation. The results indicated that research language, particularly references to the type of study (e.g., longitudinal) or methodology (e.g., data mining), within bills predicted bill progression out of committee and enactment. Rigorous scientific methods may either lend credence to a bill during its progression in the legislative process or may be infused in language during mark-up and negotiation of bills that successfully progress in Congress. In-depth bill coding illustrated the ways that research has been used in legislation to define problems, reinforce effective practice, generate knowledge through research and evaluation, and disseminate findings. A prominent implication of these findings is that policies could be used to improve data monitoring and evaluation capacity in ways that enhance the implementation of evidence-based interventions. The comprehensive use of research in legislation increases the likelihood that policies reach their intended outcomes and benefit those they are designed to serve.
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- 2022
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39. Sequence Organization of Autistic Children's Play with Caregivers: Rethinking Follow-In Directives
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Bottema-Beutel, Kristen, Crowley, Shannon, and Kim, So Yoon
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This study is a qualitative investigation of caregiver-child interactions, involving 15 autistic children who are in the early stages of language learning. Data consisted of 15-min videos of free-play interactions recorded in a University clinic. We use conversation analysis to examine the sequence organization of proposal episodes, where the caregiver proposes some course of action regarding the child's play activity. Prior work has used a speech act theoretical framework to identify follow-in directives, which are similar to proposals, but identified at the utterance level rather than at the level of social action. According to conversation analysis, social actions are implemented over multiple interactional turns and produced in collaboration between interaction partners. Our analysis showed that caregivers design their talk in ways that enable autistic children's participation in interactional turn-taking by forecasting the upcoming proposal. They also socialize children into expectations around turn-taking, by providing an "interaction envelope" around children's conduct so that it can be construed as completing interactional sequences. Finally, we show how autistic children can display an orientation to turn-taking by timing their interactive moves to occur at transitional moments in the interaction in ways similar to adult conversational turn-taking.
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- 2022
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40. Interventions for Transition-Age Youth with Disabilities: A Meta-Analysis of Group Design Studies
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Crowley, Shannon
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This meta-analytic review investigated interventions for transition-age youth diagnosed with autism, intellectual disability, or extensive support needs. Nineteen group design studies with 215 effect sizes met inclusion criteria. A robust variance estimation procedure that accounts for the clustering effect sizes within studies was used to synthesize effect sizes within each intervention and outcome type. Occupational Therapy/Physical Therapy interventions have significant and positive effects on gross motor outcomes (g = 0.73, p < 0.01). All remaining interventions and outcomes could not be synthesized due to a limited number of studies, but are further described in a narrative manner. Recommendations for future research include improving the methodological quality of intervention studies and further analyzing the effects of interventions for transition-age youth.
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- 2022
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41. Attending to Task Demands: Systematic Observation of Parent Directives and Guidance in Varying Situational Contexts
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Rusby, Julie C., Prinz, Ronald J., Metzler, Carol W., Crowley, Ryann, and Sanders, Matthew R.
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Background: Parenting strategies such as communicating clear expectations, providing calm directions, and teaching specific skills can strengthen young children's social-emotional development. Parenting programs for children with disruptive behavior often emphasize gaining compliance via effective directives, and less on how to facilitate child skill acquisition or on effective parenting for differing situations and task demands. Objective: We aimed to study how parenting strategies and associated child behavior vary by situational contexts. Specifically, we focused on the differential use of directives and guidance during different tasks. Method: This observation study utilized a microsocial coding system, the Parent-Child Play Task Observation System (PCPTOS), to closely examine parent and child interactions in multiple analogue task situations. The study drew on pre-intervention data for 224 parent-child dyads who participated in a parenting-focused intervention trial for children ages 3-7 who presented elevated levels of disruptive behaviors. Results: Interrater reliabilities were very good to excellent. Parents used directives more frequently during the clean-up task and guidance more frequently during the teaching task compared to the other tasks. Associations of parent use of directives and guidance with child behavior and affect differed by task. Observed parent directives were associated with child disruptive behavior during each task, whereas parent guidance was negatively associated with child disruptive behavior and positively associated with child positive affect during the teaching task. Conclusions: Parenting strategies that are well matched to the situational context and proactively consider task demands are more likely to facilitate children's social-emotional development.
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- 2022
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42. Complex Pathways to Transfer: A Qualitative Comparative Analysis of the Transition from Community College to 4-Year University
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Jabbar, Huriya, McKinnon-Crowley, Saralyn, and Serrata, Carmen
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Many community college students express a desire to transfer to a 4-year institution, but few achieve that goal. In this article, we examine what conditions lead to successful student transfer and which serve as barriers. Drawing on data from a longitudinal qualitative study of 61 transfer-intending students in Texas and using qualitative comparative analysis, we investigate the student-level conditions and experiences that contribute to successful or unsuccessful transfer to a 4-year institution. We find that there is no single condition that can predict success. Instead, we describe how factors such as social capital, students' family background, and advising supports interact with one another to determine student success or failure in the transfer process. We identify specific pathways to transfer, with implications for policies and programs that can help bolster students in the face of potential barriers. We provide suggestions for policy, practice, and future research.
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- 2019
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43. Social Media, Aggregators, Analytics, and the Writing Center
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Crowley-Watson, Megan
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In an attempt to increase writing center attendance and overall retention, a social media strategy was put into place in the Spring 2019 semester at Edward Waters College, an HBCU in Jacksonville, FL, and continued through the summer. In this case study, the choice of social media platforms is considered, including what platforms the Writing Center's target audience uses. The use of aggregators for scheduling is also assessed, with an eye to efficacy and economy of time and funding. Finally, the use of social media analytics is discussed to determine the best strategy for analyzing interactions with followers and other users.
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- 2019
44. A Scoping Review of Technology-Based Vocational Interventions for Individuals with Autism
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Kim, So Yoon, Crowley, Shannon, and Lee, Youngsun
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This scoping review synthesized existing literature to address what is known about technology-based employment interventions for individuals with autism and how these interventions were conducted. A systematic multi-database search yielded 48 studies (362 participants; mean age = 20.5 years; 85.3% male) that met the inclusion criteria. Phones/tablets were used most frequently; 33 studies used technological devices for video modeling and/or prompting independently or alongside cueing or feedback. Most interventions were effective in improving job-specific, transferable, and interview skills of individuals with autism. Future studies are needed to examine whether these interventions lead to generalized outcomes and employment opportunities. We also offer recommendations for practice focused on teaching transition-age students digital literacy skills and transferable skills for a wide range of job options.
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- 2022
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45. Mechanisms by Which Early Eye Gaze to the Mouth during Multisensory Speech Influences Expressive Communication Development in Infant Siblings of Children with and without Autism
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Santapuram, Pooja, Feldman, Jacob I., Bowman, Sarah M., Raj, Sweeya, Suzman, Evan, Crowley, Shannon, Kim, So Yoon, Keceli-Kaysili, Bahar, Bottema-Beutel, Kristen, Lewkowicz, David J., Wallace, Mark T., and Woynaroski, Tiffany G.
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Looking to the mouth of a talker early in life predicts expressive communication. We hypothesized that looking at a talker's mouth may signal that infants are ready for increased supported joint engagement and that it subsequently facilitates prelinguistic vocal development and translates to broader gains in expressive communication. We tested this hypothesis in 50 infants aged 6-18 months with the heightened and general population-level likelihood of autism diagnosis (Sibs-autism and Sibs-NA; respectively). We measured infants' gaze to a speaker's face using an eye-tracking task, supported joint engagement during parent--child free play sessions, vocal complexity during a communication sample, and broader expressive communication. Looking at the mouth was indirectly associated with expressive communication via increased higher-order supported joint engagement and vocal complexity. This indirect effect did not vary according to sibling status. This study provides preliminary insights into the mechanisms by which looking at the mouth may influence expressive communication development.
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- 2022
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46. Critical Thinking Teaching Practices in Community College
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Andrea J. Crowley
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As artificial intelligence (AI) becomes more ubiquitous, and machine learning continues to optimize systems and data, the human contribution to our working and social worlds must evolve to be more sophisticated. Labeled as the fourth industrial revolution by the World Economic Forum (2019), employment roles comprised of repetitive tasks and rote analysis will no longer be needed because machines and artificial intelligence will be able to program themselves to perform these functions. Many experts forecast that for every low-skilled occupation a new, more sophisticated role will be invented (Skilton & Hovesepian, 2018). Machines will continue to optimize and perform automated tasks and our employers need people to direct the technology at all levels. Organizations across all sectors will need people who can adapt, anticipate, and vision the future to stay relevant. Underpinning these authentic intelligence skills of imagination, anticipation, and judgment is proficiency in critical thinking. This qualitative study engaged nine faculty members in a large community college who represent different divisions withing the academic affairs unit. The main aim of this research examines how community college faculty contextualize and develop critical thinking skills in the classroom setting. Using Shulman's framework of the Knowledge Base of Teaching (1987) to make meaning of the findings, the study examined how the faculty group are using effective methods to build knowledge (Arum & Roska, 2011; Facione, 1990; Halpern, 1997; Kurfiss, 1988) and the ability to self-direct intellectual pursuits (Facione, 1990;; Kuhn, 1999; Paul & Elder, 2010). This study suggests that building curiosity and the explicit habit of thinking, is an opportunity for future focus. Recommendations include faculty development programming for teaching applications that create student-led inquiry environments and how institutions might design the educational journey as more than topical skill or knowledge acquisition. Building competence in self-led thinking may be an opportunity to address the critical thinking skill gap. As an ethical and social justice strategy, colleges that promote student skill application and the habit of intellectual growth will prepare their students for future success in various work roles as those roles innovate in response to transformational technologies. [The dissertation citations contained here are published with the permission of ProQuest LLC. Further reproduction is prohibited without permission. Copies of dissertations may be obtained by Telephone (800) 1-800-521-0600. Web page: http://www.proquest.com/en-US/products/dissertations/individuals.shtml.]
- Published
- 2022
47. Mamapreneurialism: Creating More Inclusive Institutions through the Lens of Working Mothers' Experiences in Student Affairs
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Burmicky, Jorge, McKinnon-Crowley, Saralyn, Bukoski, Beth, and Black, Victoria
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Neoliberalism and patriarchal norms have shaped the working conditions for student affairs professionals. This case study collected individual and focus group interviews, leveraging the experiences and situated knowledge of working mothers in student affairs to develop organizational guidelines for more equitable and unified work environments. By applying mamapreneurialism as a conceptual framework, this study sought to understand how working mothers in student affairs realize their personal and professional aspirations. Findings showed that student affairs mothers need centralized access to information and experience marginalization and power differences with supervisors compared to faculty. They also face structural inequality in the higher education workplace. Structural barriers, such as inadequate university infrastructure (e.g., lactation rooms and parking), complicated participants' abilities to navigate working conditions. Findings focus on recalibrating institutions to become more inclusive for all.
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- 2022
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48. Intelligent Science Exhibits: Transforming Hands-On Exhibits into Mixed-Reality Learning Experiences
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Yannier, Nesra, Crowley, Kevin, Do, Youngwook, Hudson, Scott E., and Koedinger, Kenneth R.
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Background: Museum exhibits encourage exploration with physical materials typically with minimal signage or guidance. Ideally children get interactive support as they explore, but it is not always feasible to have knowledgeable staff regularly present. Technology-based interactive support can provide guidance to help learners achieve scientific understanding for how and why things work and engineering skills for designing and constructing useful artifacts and for solving important problems. We have developed an innovative AI-based technology, Intelligent Science Exhibits that provide interactive guidance to visitors of an inquiry-based science exhibit. Methods: We used this technology to investigate alternative views of appropriate levels of guidance in exhibits. We contrasted visitor engagement and learning from interaction with an Intelligent Science Exhibit to a matched conventional exhibit. Findings: We found evidence that the Intelligent Science Exhibit produces substantially better learning for both scientific and engineering outcomes, equivalent levels of self-reported enjoyment, and higher levels of engagement as measured by the length of time voluntarily spent at the exhibit. Contribution: These findings show potential for transforming hands-on museum exhibits with intelligent science exhibits and more generally indicate how providing children with feedback on their predictions and scientific explanations enhances their learning and engagement.
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- 2022
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49. 'I Had to Jump through a Lot of Hoops': How Working Mothers in Student Affairs Navigate Institutional Policies and Student Affairs Norms
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McKinnon-Crowley, Saralyn, Bukoski, Beth, Black, Victoria, Burmicky, Jorge, Molina, Veronica, and Chacon, Krysta
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In this instrumental case study, we explored the experiences of working mothers in student affairs and how their situated realities are shaped by institutional and professional norms, including commonly understood written and unwritten practices. We conducted interviews and focus groups with 21 mothers working full-time at a research-intensive university in the South. We crafted themes to illustrate how ideal worker norms, inequality regimes, and the maternal wall were persistent concerns for the mothers in our study. Mothers had to make decisions based on inadequate institutional policies while the institution simultaneously benefited from skills they imported from motherhood to student affairs work. Given the condition of federal and state policies, we offer implications for institutional and unit changes to better meet mothers where they are, accommodate their unique needs, and provide pathways for them to continue contributing meaningfully to the field.
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- 2022
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50. The Impact of a Summer Intervention Focused on Foundational Concepts of Number Sense for Early Learners
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Cooper, Sandi, Shelton, Ryann N., Padgett, R. Noah, Crowley, Brandy, Kerschen, Keith, and Donham, Melissa P.
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This longitudinal quantitative study determined the impact of a summer mathematics academy for early learners on their number sense and how their number sense compared to that of their peers who did not attend the academy. The Texas Early Mathematics Inventory -- Progress Monitoring (TEMI-PM) was used to measure students' number sense. Results revealed that (1) all participants showed growth in their understanding of Number Identification in their first year of attending the academy, (2) participants who attended for two consecutive years grew in multiple areas of early number sense, and (3) participants who attended for one year demonstrated a decreased gap when compared to peers. The evidence supports the benefits of a mathematics-focused summer intervention to develop number sense for early learners.
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- 2022
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