8 results on '"Sophie P. Barnes"'
Search Results
2. Adaptation and Efficacy of a Social-Emotional Learning Intervention (SEL Kernels) in Early Childhood Settings in Southeastern Brazil: A Quasi-Experimental Study
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Ana Luiza Raggio Colagrossi, Maria Clara de Magalhães-Barbosa, Dana Charles McCoy, Sophie P. Barnes, Sonya Temko, Rebecca Bailey, Stephanie M. Jones, Lucas Monteiro Bianchi, Antônio José Ledo Alves da Cunha, and Arnaldo Prata-Barbosa
- Abstract
Prior research has shown that social-emotional learning (SEL) interventions offer promise for supporting young children's outcomes, but implementation problems are frequent, especially in low-resource contexts. This study describes the adaptation and efficacy of a new, classroom-based SEL intervention for children aged 3 to 6 years in early childhood education programs in Brazil. SEL Kernels are simple, brief, targeted SEL activities that can be flexibly implemented by teachers. Research Findings: Results of a quasi-experimental study using teacher reports with 314 Brazilian children (164 male, 150 female) who did (n = 205) and did not (n = 109) receive SEL Kernels suggested intervention-related improvements in teachers' reports of child behavior problems (d = 0.65) and emotion regulation (d = 1.12) in this setting. Practice or Policy: Implications of this work -- including the importance of teacher buy-in and implementation -- are discussed.
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- 2024
3. Measuring Noncognitive Skills in School Settings: Assessments of Executive Function and Social-Emotional Competencies
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Stephanie Jones, Nonie K. Lesaux, Sophie P. Barnes
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- 2022
4. The Contribution of Individual and Compositional Factors to Executive Function in Elementary Classrooms: Implications for Intervention and Assessment
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Society for Research on Educational Effectiveness (SREE), Sophie P. Barnes, Stephanie M. Jones, and Rebecca Bailey
- Abstract
Background: Decades of research demonstrating the critical role of executive function (EF) and other regulation-related skills on children's short- and long-term outcomes has generated interest in measuring and cultivating these critical skills in early childhood and elementary school children (e.g., Bull et al., 2008; Moffitt et al., 2011). Most prior work on EF operationalizes, measures, and analyzes outcomes at the child level, meaning the analysis typically focuses on individuals' skill development without accounting for the dynamic, social, interactive world in which skills develop (Bailey & Jones, 2019). For example, we still don't have much basic information on variation in EF between individual children in classrooms, variation between classrooms, or on compositional features that influence EF skills over time. Designing effective interventions and aligned, relevant measurement tools demands more knowledge about the factors at multiple levels of children's ecologies (i.e., both individual characteristics and classroom phenomena) that are linked to variation in children's EF skills over time. Research Questions: In this study we address the following research questions: 1. How much variation in EF scores exists (1) between schools, (2) within schools (i.e., between classrooms), and (3) within classrooms (i.e., between children) at the beginning and end of one school year (fall and spring)? What classroom and individual factors predict variation in children's EF in the spring? 2. What predicts children's spring EF scores? Do aggregate (i.e., classroom-level) EF skills predict children's outcomes over and above individual EF scores? Setting and Participants: Data for this study come from a randomized controlled trial of the Social, Emotional and Cognitive Understanding and Regulation in education (SECURe) program, an intervention focused on improving the SEL skills of elementary-aged children. Six schools in Phoenix, AZ, were randomly assigned to the SECURe intervention or to a control condition (three schools to each). All six schools were designated as schoolwide Title I schools. Most children were Hispanic or Latino/a (see Table 1). Direct assessments were conducted with all children in three randomly selected classrooms per grade, resulting in a sample of 518 direct assessments from 37 kindergarten and grade 1 classrooms and 572 direct assessments from 30 grade 23 classrooms. Children were assessed using two direct assessments of EF skills from the Woodcock-Johnson III Tests of Achievement (attention control and working memory) and an assessor report of children's attention and impulsivity during the assessment period using the Preschool Self-Regulation Assessment Assessor Report (PSRA-AR) in the fall and spring of that year. Data Collection and Analysis: To explore the first research question about the amount of variation within and between classrooms, we examined intraclass correlations (ICCs) for each fall and spring outcome in multilevel regression models, first with random intercepts for each school and then with random intercepts for each classroom. To examine predictors of variation in levels of EF, we constructed a taxonomy of seven models for each of our primary outcomes. The first is a null model with only the primary outcome and classroom random intercept; the second model adds child gender. The next three models add classroom-level variables (described below). The final two models add school-level variables--a dummy variable for the SECURe intervention in model 6, and school fixed effects in model 7. Classroom-level EF was operationalized in three ways for each measure. First, we created a leave-out classroom mean, calculated by averaging baseline scores for children in each classroom without the child's own score (i.e., leaving out that child's score). To identify children at the upper and lower quartiles of the distribution, we calculated a variable capturing the number of children in each classroom scoring equal to or below the grade-level 25th percentile on each measure, or equal to or above the grade-level 75th percentile on each measure in each grade, meaning that one cut score existed for each grade level, across all schools. All analyses were done in grade bands (kindergarten and grade 1; grades 2 and 3). To address the second research question, we present a set of multilevel regression models following the same taxonomy as above, predicting spring outcomes with (1) individual level predictors--child baseline scores and gender, (2) classroom level predictors, and (3) school-level variables--the SECURe intervention and school fixed effects. Results: Our findings indicate greater variance in children's EF within schools than between, with very little or no variance arising from differences between schools. Though we observed greater variance within classrooms (i.e., between children and therefore assumed to derive from individual characteristics and experiences) than between them, a substantial amount of variation in EF scores appears in our data to arise from differences between classrooms (see Table 2). In several cases, the leave-out classroom mean accounted for a similar or greater amount of variance than did children's individual baseline scores. As expected, children's individual fall scores predicted spring outcomes across all models. A key finding from this study is that classroom-level variables, particularly the leave-out classroom mean, were also significant predictors of children's outcomes, and in many cases were stronger predictors than were children's own baseline scores. The relatively consistent pattern of results for the leave-out classroom mean and the magnitude of the coefficient compared to the individual scores suggests that the skills of children's peers constitute, in some cases, a stronger predictor of their spring EF skills than do their own individual skills at the beginning of the school year. Overall, school-level factors were not significant predictors of children's spring outcomes. However, random assignment to the SECURe intervention was associated with increases in attention control for second- and third-graders. See Tables 3-5. Conclusions: Findings from this study suggest that an ecological approach to intervention design, measurement, and analysis would provide richer perspectives on the role of settings in student's development than the largely dominant individualized approaches. The presentation will discuss implications for intervention and assessment in school and classroom contexts.
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- 2022
5. An Ecological View of Executive Function in Young Children: Variation in and Predictors of Executive Function Skills Over One School Year
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Sophie P. Barnes, Stephanie M. Jones, and Rebecca Bailey
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Cognitive Neuroscience ,Developmental and Educational Psychology - Abstract
For many years, researchers studied EFs in the laboratory with a focus on understanding an individual child's development and brain processes in a controlled environment. Building on this foundational research, there is a growing interest in EFs in the context of a child's dynamic, social world and the contextual and compositional factors influencing EF development. This paper provides a descriptive view of EFs in 1,112 K-3 children from six schools in Phoenix, AZ. The study's goals were to examine (1) variation in EF scores between and within schools and classrooms, (2) predictors of variation in children's spring EF scores, and (3) individual and compositional predictors of children's spring EF scores. Our findings indicate greater variation in children's EF within schools than between, with very little or no variation arising from differences between schools. Though we observed greater variation within classrooms than between them, a notable amount of variance in children's spring EF scores appears to arise from differences between classrooms. Classroom-level variables, including a fall leave-out classroom mean (without the students' own score) and the number of children in the top or bottom grade-level quartiles in each classroom, were significant predictors of variation in spring EF scores as well as in fall to spring changes in EF. In some cases, the classroom variables were stronger predictors than individual fall scores. Findings suggest that understanding variation and cultivating growth in EF skills requires intervention, measurement, and analytic approaches that extend beyond the individual to include compositional features of the classroom environment. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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- 2022
6. Social and Emotional Learning (SEL) in Schools
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Sophie P. Barnes and Stephanie M. Jones
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- 2022
- Full Text
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7. Navigating SEL From the Inside Out: Looking Inside & Across 18 Leading SEL Programs: A Practical Resource for Schools and OST ProvidersMiddle & High School Focus
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Edwin Chng, Edwin Chng, Annie Hooper, Sophie P. Barnes, Alisha Kannarr, Aashna Poddar, Gretchen Brion-Meisels, Katharine E. Brush, Samantha Wettje, Stephanie M. Jones, Thelma Ramirez, Edwin Chng, Edwin Chng, Annie Hooper, Sophie P. Barnes, Alisha Kannarr, Aashna Poddar, Gretchen Brion-Meisels, Katharine E. Brush, Samantha Wettje, Stephanie M. Jones, and Thelma Ramirez
- Abstract
The field of social and emotional learning (SEL) is rapidly expanding, as evidence emerges that social and emotional skills have a positive impact on learning and life outcomes. This guide to evidence-based SEL programs provides detailed information on 18 middle and high school programs, encompassing curricular content and program highlights. School or out-of-school-time program practitioners interested in SEL can use the resource to look "inside and across" SEL programs to better understand their content and assess their fit with school district or community needs.?The guide was written by Harvard Graduate School of Education professor Stephanie Jones, an expert in social and emotional learning, and a team of researchers. It is a practical resource that provides profiles of each program, including the specific skills targeted and instructional methods used. Some programs, for example, are designed to help students regulate their behavior and build positive relationships, while others are aimed at developing certain mindsets or character traits.Much of the guide focuses on detailed program information, while introductory chapters discuss a range of topics, including SEL in out-of-school-time (OST) programming, equitable SEL and a trauma-sensitive approach to SEL.In addition to helping schools and OST providers make decisions about choosing a social and emotional learning program, the guide is designed to be a useful resource for those who want to better understand social and emotional learning and the landscape of available programs or assess the effectiveness of one they are already using. A supplement includes worksheets to help users select a program and think through considerations on everything from program components to program duration and cost.??Key components of the guide include: Background information on SEL and its benefits, including key features of effective programs and common implementation challenges, A summary of the evidence base for each of the 1
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- 2022
8. Measuring Noncognitive Skills in School Settings : Assessments of Executive Function and Social-Emotional Competencies
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Stephanie Jones, Nonie K. Lesaux, Sophie P. Barnes, Stephanie Jones, Nonie K. Lesaux, and Sophie P. Barnes
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- Educational tests and measurements, Emotional intelligence, Social learning--Study and teaching
- Abstract
Children's social–emotional and self-regulation skills are critical for success in school and, ultimately, in the workplace. How can educators determine the most effective approaches for measuring students'interpersonal competencies? And how can they use the data to improve their own practice? Relevant for school leaders, educators, researchers, and other stakeholders, this book brings together leading experts from multiple disciplines to discuss the current state of measurement and assessment of a broad range of noncognitive skills and present an array of innovative tools. Chapters describe measures targeting the individual student, classroom, whole school, and community; highlight implications for instructional decision making; examine key issues in methodology, practice, and policy; and share examples of systematic school- and districtwide implementation.
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- 2022
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