Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01806987

A Test of the Kids in Transition to School (KITS) Program in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods

A Randomized Efficacy Trial of the Kids in Transition to School (KITS) Program to Improve School Readiness of Children in Disadvantaged Communities

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
265 (actual)
Sponsor
Oregon Social Learning Center · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
4 Years – 6 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The purpose of this project to determine whether the KITS Program, an intervention to improve early literacy, prosocial and emotion and behavior regulation domains of school readiness, improves school readiness and school outcomes in children from socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods.

Detailed description

PURPOSE: This project is a randomized efficacy trial of the KITS Program, an intervention to improve early literacy, prosocial and emotion and behavior regulation domains of school readiness, with children from socioeconomically disadvantaged neighborhoods. The project will extend the evidence on the efficacy of the intervention from two previous randomized efficacy trials of the KITS Program with special needs populations to examine the impacts of the intervention on the broader population of children from disadvantaged backgrounds in general education. SETTING: The intervention will be conducted in elementary school classrooms in high-poverty, high-crime neighborhoods in a medium-sized metropolitan area of the Pacific Northwest during the summer before and the first 2 months of kindergarten. POPULATION: This study involves the recruitment of 240 children who will be entering kindergarten in the fall and their families in three yearly cohorts (n = 80). The children will be recruited from neighborhoods that have been selected as some of the most disadvantaged in the state in terms of income and school readiness indicators. INTERVENTION: The KITS Program is a high-intensity, short-term program timed to occur during the transition to kindergarten-a critical developmental milestone with far-reaching effects on school outcomes. The curriculum focuses on the early literacy, social, and self-regulation skills critical for success in kindergarten and on contextual characteristics (i.e., parent involvement in early literacy and positive parenting). KITS features 24 curriculum-based therapeutic playgroups focused on early literacy, social, and self-regulatory skills and 12 psychoeducational parent workshops focused on parent involvement in early literacy and positive parenting practices. CONTROL CONDITION: The children in the services-as-usual condition will receive any early childhood learning services that they would typically receive prior to school entry. Services received will be assessed at each data time point. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The children will be randomly assigned to the KITS condition or a services-as-usual condition and assessed at four time points: spring prior to kindergarten, immediately prior to kindergarten entry, kindergarten fall, and kindergarten spring; 160 of the children will also be assessed in first grade spring. MEASURES AND KEY OUTCOMES: Our multimethod, multi-informant outcome measures will include the following: direct assessments of early literacy and social-emotional skills prior to kindergarten and literacy skills and social-emotional functioning during kindergarten and first grade; parent and teacher reports on child skills and behaviors, parent involvement in early literacy and school, and parenting practices; direct classroom observations of child academic engaged time and social behaviors; and school records data on grades, office discipline referrals, special education services received, and attendance. DATA-ANALYTIC STRATEGIES: Analyses will employ variable-centered (e.g., ANOVA and regression) and person-centered (e.g., latent growth curve modeling) approaches. Multilevel latent variable modeling will be used to test how changes in hypothesized mediators affect longer-term outcomes and how outcomes vary depending on level of hypothesized moderators.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALKITS ProgramThe KITS Program is a 4-month psychosocial intervention for children at high risk for school difficulties and their caregivers. The intervention begins in the summer before kindergarten and continues across the first two months of kindergarten. The KITS intervention consists of: (a) child school readiness play groups to facilitate the development of self-regulatory, social, and early literacy skills (2 times per week in summer, 1 time per week in the fall); and (b) a 12 session psychoeducational workshop to promote parent involvement in the child's early literacy and schooling and the use of effective parenting techniques (once per week in summer, bi-weekly in the fall).

Timeline

Start date
2013-03-01
Primary completion
2017-01-31
Completion
2017-01-31
First posted
2013-03-08
Last updated
2017-09-19

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01806987. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.