Developing an evidence base for behavioural interventions: a case study of the Headsprout early reading programme

Developing an evidence base for behavioural interventions: a case study of the Headsprout early reading programme Louise D. Denne, Emily J. Roberts-Tyler, Corinna Grindle Tizard Learning Disability Review, Vol. ahead-of-print, No. ahead-of-print, pp.- Evidence-informed decision-making is considered best practice when choosing interventions in applied settings across health, social care and education. Developing that evidence base, however, is not straightforward. The pupose of this paper is to describe the process implemented by the Sharland Foundation Developmental Disabilities Applied Behavioural Research and Impact Network (SF-DDARIN) that systematically develops an evidence base for behaviorally based interventions.In this case study, the progressive research steps undertaken by the SF-DDARIN to develop the evidence base for an online reading intervention, the Headsprout® Early Reading programme (HER®), which uses behavioural principles to promote learning to read, are described.A series of discrete projects targeting gaps in the evidence base for HER® led to funding two randomised controlled trials in England, one in education and one in health and social care.This case study illustrates an original, creative and effective way of collaborating across academic research departments and applied settings to extend the evidence base for a chosen intervention systematically.
Source: Tizard Learning Disability Review - Category: Disability Authors: Source Type: research