Predicting Teacher Use and Benefit from Virtual Training in Classroom-Level Positive Behavioral Supports

Virtual training models to support teachers’ use of positive behavioral supports provide an unprecedented opportunity to support teacher professional development via practice, reflection, problem solving, and feedback in an authentic learning context. However, little is known regarding factors that...

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Veröffentlicht in:School mental health 2022-06, Vol.14 (2), p.357-373
Hauptverfasser: Shernoff, Elisa S., Lekwa, Adam J., Frazier, Stacy L., Delmarre, Alban, Gabbard, Joseph, Zhang, Daheng, Bhuamik, Dulal, Lisetti, Christine
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Virtual training models to support teachers’ use of positive behavioral supports provide an unprecedented opportunity to support teacher professional development via practice, reflection, problem solving, and feedback in an authentic learning context. However, little is known regarding factors that influence teacher use and benefit from these models. This study examined a newly developed training model, Interactive Virtual Training for Teachers (IVT-T), including teacher interactions with IVT-T, teacher and technology characteristics that predicted training dosage, and whether training dosage predicted reliable changes in use of positive behavioral supports. K-8th grade teachers ( N  = 27) working in three high-poverty schools had access to IVT-T over 8 weeks. Multilevel regression models indicated teachers used the system, on average, 50% less than what was recommended, and weekly usage patterns reflected inconsistent and ad hoc engagement with the system. Teaching experience was significantly negatively associated ( b  = − 0.09; p  
ISSN:1866-2625
1866-2633
DOI:10.1007/s12310-021-09469-z