Abstract

This study sought to scaffold administration performance of a standardized bilingual screener to sufficient levels of accuracy for data collection using principles of Cognitive Load Theory by managing task complexity when training pre-service clinicians. Before training administration skills, two students were given copies of the manual for the Bilingual English Spanish Oral Screener (BESOS) and asked to administer the protocol independently. During the intervention phase, students were scaffolded through administration tasks of increasing complexity and given explicit instruction, which included tailored goals, modeling and feedback. Performance for four skills was assessed using a fidelity rubric and analyzed using visual analysis. Performance varied per skill but overall scores were higher during the intervention phases than during the baseline phase for both students. In addition, accuracy of performance maintained across client participants showing patterns of generalization. Although the data are limited, scaffolding training skills for pre-service clinicians appears supportive in training administration skills for bilingual tasks. The level of support may vary per skill and per language. Future research may seek to investigate other clinical skills and tasks.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to explore the effect of scaffolded training on the skills of student clinicians when administering a standardized, bilingual screener

  • The data were collected as part of an examiner training protocol for the pilot portion of the larger study, during which undergraduate volunteer research assistants administered a language screening measure to bilingual children to ensure their status as typically developing

  • The ability to accurately administer assessments, including screeners, is essential for acquisition of the knowledge and skills outcomes associated with ASHA required training standards (ASHA, 2008; ASHA, 2021)

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Summary

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to explore the effect of scaffolded training on the skills of student clinicians when administering a standardized, bilingual screener

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