Guest guest Posted March 22, 2005 Report Share Posted March 22, 2005 I have never understood the difference between IBI and intensive eclectic intervention. If both collect and respond to data, aren't they both ABA? And if the real difference between the two groups is data collection, of course IBI would have better outcomes. A better study IMO would be to do traditional IBI v. eclectic with similar data analysis protocols and see which one works better. Because I don't think you are really testing education methods here, but rather, data response methods. I don't know why they bothered. t Burk On Mar 22, 2005, at 7:34 PM, wrote: We compared the effects of three treatment approaches on preschool-age children with autism spectrum disorders. Twenty-nine children received intensive behavior analytic intervention (IBT; 1:1 adult:child ratio, 25–40 h per week). A comparison group (n = 16) received intensive “eclectic” intervention (a combination of methods, 1:1 or 1:2 ratio, 30 h per week) in public special education classrooms (designated the AP group). A second comparison group (GP) comprised 16 children in non-intensive public early intervention programs (a combination of methods, small groups, 15 h per week). Independent examiners administered standardized tests of cognitive, language, and adaptive skills to children in all three groups at intake and about 14 months after treatment began. The groups were similar on key variables at intake. At follow-up, the IBT group had higher mean standard scores in all skill domains than the AP and GP groups. The differences were statistically significant for all domains except motor skills. There were no statistically significant differences between the mean scores of the AP and GP groups. Learning rates at follow-up were also substantially higher for children in the IBT group than for either of the other two groups. These findings are consistent with other research showing that IBT is considerably more efficacious than “eclectic” intervention. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 23, 2005 Report Share Posted March 23, 2005 At several folks suggestions, I am going to read the article in question. But I'd like to clarify for the group to discuss some of my concerns. First of all, the study results are being presented in a broad generality (IBI is better than eclectic). That, I think is dangerous. It doesn't answer the question of what mix of programs is best for a child on an individual level. My children did much better in an eclectic (not TEACCH) program than they did in traditional ABA (lovaas). So I think it leaves one to wonder what kind of ABA was used in the study. If it is VB, I am reassured. But it would be VERY scary if some of those horrible non-VB programs take this research and run with it to the detriment of those of us who prefer a NET bent. The generality that is being presented in the study summary differs so much from my own experience (we had a very eclectic mix) that I wonder if it shouldn't be broken down into subgroups. E.g. were there some kids that did better with the eclectic mix than all IBI? If so, what were their characteristics? Can you see why I am concerned? If I were a new parent, this study would leave me scared that I was doing the wrong thing by mixing the bag of tricks. Which is what we did to spectacular success, I might add. I am worried about it being taken that way. t Burk www.autismteachingtools.com Home of the " Early Learner at Home " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 24, 2005 Report Share Posted March 24, 2005 Ron, The distinction is between IBT=(ABA =ITT/DTT + NET + peer play) vs eclectic (DTT + TEACCH + traditional preschool + SI/OT), In the , et. al. paper. The 3 groups are IBT (25-30 hours at age less than 3, 35-40 at the age of 3+, 1:1), AP(30 hours/week eclectic 1:1 or 1:2), and AP (15 hours/week eclectic, small groups. The exact makeup and protocol of the 3 groups are in the paper, as well as the assessment measures and data analysis. The reference is: " A comparison of intensive behavior analytic and eclectic treatments for young children with autism " --Jane S. , Coleen R. Sparkman, G. Cohen, Green, Harold Stanislaw; Research in Developmental Disabilities, 26 (2005) 359-383. Abstract We compared the effects of three treatment approaches on preschool- age children with autism spectrum disorders. Twenty-nine children received intensive behavior analytic intervention (IBT; 1:1 adult:child ratio, 25–40 h per week). A comparison group (n = 16) received intensive ``eclectic'' intervention (a combination of methods, 1:1 or 1:2 ratio, 30 h per week) in public special education classrooms (designated the AP group). A second comparison group (GP) comprised 16 children in non-intensive public early intervention programs (a combination of methods, small groups, 15 h per week). Independent examiners administered standardized tests of cognitive, language, and adaptive skills to children in all three groups at intake and about 14 months after treatment began. The groups were similar on key variables at intake. At follow-up, the IBT group had higher mean standard scores in all skill domains than the AP and GP groups. The differences were statistically signi & #64257;cant for all domains except motor skills. There were no statistically signi & #64257;cant differences between the mean scores of the AP and GP groups. Learning rates at follow-up were also substantially higher for children in the IBT group than for either of the other two groups. These & #64257;ndings are consistent with other research showing that IBT is considerably more ef & #64257;cacious than ``eclectic'' intervention. Available online at www.sciencedirect.com Hope that helps. Regina F. -- In , " Ron Kincaid " <rekincaid@h...> wrote: > > Would someone repost the article in question, or at least where I can find > it? I think that if we're differentiating ABA and VB, then there's some > significant definitional problems going on. Both use ABA principles to > teach skills to children. There is, I think, much more similiar than > different. I would expect " eclectic " to refer to a mix of speech therapy, > OT, as well as many other " therapies " of questionable value - like TEACCH. > > Ron Kincaid > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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