Title: Indicator of Parent Child Interaction
1Indicator of Parent Child Interaction
IPCI
- Kathleen M. Baggett, Ph.D. Judith J. Carta,
Ph.D. - Juniper Gardens Childrens Project
- University of Kansas
- Society for Research in Child Development
- Boston, MA
- March 2007
This research was supported by Federal Grant
90-FY0052-01 HHS ACF
2 A General Outcomes Measure
IPCI
For checking growth in parents responsiveness to
their child in ways that promote positive
social-emotional behavior.
3 IPCI
4Provide quick snapshots of parent-child
interaction that can be taken repeatedly to
Practitioners need practical tools that can
- Help interventionists know when intervention is
needed - Help interventionists see when they are making a
difference - Help interventionists know when an intervention
change is needed - Help supervisors facilitate intervention-planning
- Help program directors understand when programs
need improvement - While there are many measures of parent-child
interaction, tools designed specifically for
practitioners to guide intervention
decision-making have been lacking.
5Purpose
IPCI
- Monitor progress
- Identify risky interactions
- Guide intervention decision-making
6Decision Making Model for Generating Options
73-Tiered Model for Individualizing Services
Based on Child Family Needs
8IPCI Administration
- Administered in family homes or other
caregiving settings - (biological home, foster home, center-based
care) - Children 3-42 months of age and a familiar
caregiver - Four semi-structured activities are observed
for a total of 10 - minutes
- Free Play
- Looking at Books
- Distraction Task
- Dressing
- 14 items are rated on a 4-point scale following
observation - Videotaping is not required (but useful for
intervention - purposes)
9IPCI Activities
Looking at Books
Free play
Distraction
Dressing
10IPCI Activities
Free play (4 minutes)
Whatever it is that you and your child like to
do together- something your child loves
Free play video clips
11IPCI Activities
Looking at Books (2 minutes)
Here are some books for you and your child to
look at together- however you and your child
would like to spend time with these books is
fine.
Looking at Books video clips
12IPCI Activities
Distraction Task (2 minutes)
There are times when parents need to keep
children away from things- either because they
may be dangerous or just inappropriate. Lets
see how your child responds when there are
materials that are off limits. Please keep child
on the blanket and away from the recorder and
keys.
Distraction clip
13IPCI Activities
Dressing (2 minutes)
Whatever its like to get dressed in the
morning (shirt, socks, shoes)
Distraction clip
14IPCI Domains and Behaviors
- Caregiver Facilitators
- Conveys acceptance and warmth
- Makes descriptive comments
- Follows childs lead
- Maintains and extends
- Uses stress reducing strategies
- Caregiver Interrupters
- Uses criticism, harsh tone
- Uses intrusions and restrictions
- Rejects childs bid
- Child Engagement
- Positive feedback
- Sustained engagement
- Follow-through
- Child Distress
- Fuss, cry
- Tantrum
- Frozen, watchful, withdrawn
15(No Transcript)
16The IPCIs Home
- With other early childhood general outcomes
- measures
- Early Communication Indicator
- Early Social Indicator
- Early Problem Solving Indicator
- Early Motor Indicator
17(No Transcript)
18Types of IPCI Reports
- Home Visitors and Supervisors
- Program Administrator
- Agency Administrator
19Home Visitor and Supervisor Reports
- For
- Progress monitoring
- Sharing data with families
- Guiding intervention decision-making
- Reflective supervision
- Mental health consultation
20IPCI Domain Reports
21Key Element Reports- Cg Facilitators
22Administrator Reports
- For reporting
- Program staff involvement in progress monitoring
- Frequency of performance monitoring for children
and families based on benchmarks - Number of children whose interactions with
caregivers are at or above benchmark at the end
of particular interventions as compared to at the
beginning - Number of children whose interactions with
caregivers are at or above benchmark at the end
of a program as compared to at entry
23Psychometric Studies
Early Head Start sample (Center on Challenging
Behavior Department of Ed) Early Head Start
University Partnership in Measurement (Developing
Meaningful Outcome Measures ACF)
24Study Sample
- Culturally diverse
- African-American African Refugees Latino
- Very low to middle SES
- Multiple Risks
- Teen mothers
- Parent low education
- High potential for child maltreatment
- Maternal depression and anxiety
- Substance Abuse
- Domestic partner abuse
- Functional homelessness
25- Research Questions
- How comparable is the IPCI to other measures of
parenting child social-emotional functioning? - How stable is the IPCI?
- Does the IPCI differentiate parents who are
different in the quality of their parenting
styles (as determined by other criterion
measures)? - Does the IPCI differentiate children who are
different in their levels of social-emotional
competence (as determined by another measure) ?
26EHS Pilot Study Measures
- Parent/Caregiver Measures
- HOME IT (Bradley Caldwell, 1979)
- Total
- Responsivity
- Acceptance
- Adult Adolescent Parenting Inventory (AAPI-2
Bavolek Keene, 1999) - Expectations
- Empathy
- Corporal Punishment
- Role Reversal
- Power/Independence
- CESD (Depression)
- Child Measure
- Brief Infant Toddler Social Emotional Assessment
(BITSEA Carter McGowan, 2005)
27Longitudinal, Cohort Design
- 3 age cohorts of children
- 1-11 Months
- 12-23 Months
- 24-42 Months
- Received monthly IPCI assessments over a 6-month
period - Pre- and post-assessment
- Demographic interview
- HOME
- AAPI-2
- BITSEA
- CESD (Maternal depression)
28Pilot Study Participants
- 64 children and their parents in the Midwest
- 42 families in an inner-urban EHS program (KS)
- 12 families with typically developing children in
a rural setting (IA) - Ethnicity
- 36.9 African-American
- 26.2 Latino
- 32.3 Euro-American
- 4.6 Other
- Child Gender
- Female 52.3
- Male 47.7
- Child Disability Status
- 24.1 Identified disability
- 75.9 Non disability status
- Parent Education Level
- 33.8 Did not graduate from highschool
- 29.2 Highschool only
- 15.4 Some college
- 21.6 Graduated from college
29Psychometric Summary
- Reliability
- Overall inter-observer agreement 92
(R86-100) - Mean parent behavior inter-observer agreement
92 (R 75-100) - Mean child behavior inter-observer agreement
91 (R 83-100) - IPCI child domain scores were correlated
significantly with parent domain scores in the
expected direction - Concurrent validity shown with the HOME AAPI
- (r .47 - .63 for Parent Facilitators r
.33-.67 in expected directions for Parent
Interrupters) - IPCI child domain scores were differentiated by
IPCI parent domain scores - IPCI parent domain scores were differentiated by
HOME score classification (top third v. bottom
third for Home Total Responsivity) - IPCI child domain scores were differentiated by
BITSEA Problem Score Classifications (Concern v.
No Concern)
30Correlations Between IPCI Parent Support Other
Parent Measures
IPCI AAPI-2 Appropriate role HOME Total CESD
Parent/Cg Support .62 .60
Acceptance/ Warmth .64 .55 -.47
Descript. Language .47 .55
Follows lead .47 .53
Introduces Extends .47 .42
Responds to Distress .63 .55 -.57
N55 plt.001
31Relationships Between IPCI Parent Behavior Scales
Child Behavior Scales
Child Positive Engagement Child Distress
Parent/Caregiver Support .73 -.33
Parent/Caregiver Interruption -.53 .46
N350 observations plt.001
32Correlations Between IPCI Parent Interrupting
Behavior Other Parent Measures
IPCI AAPI-2 parent nurturing role HOME Total CESD
Parent/Cg Interrupters -.67 -.41
Criticize -.64 -.33 .53
Restrictions/Intrusions -.63 -.34 .36
Rejects childs bid -.58 .46
33Are IPCI Child Behaviors Differentiated by Level
of IPCI Parent Support Behavior?
90.99
65.82
F20.57 plt.001
5.35
1.70
F14.28 plt.001
34Are IPCI Child Behaviors Differentiated by Level
of IPCI Parent Interrupting Behavior?
84.69
62.25
F16.98 plt.001
35Differences in IPCI Parent Behavior Based on
HOME Classification Status
84.14
60.32
F2.57 plt.01
20.18
12.92
F2.49 plt.01
36Does the IPCI differentiate children who are
identified with a disability versus those who are
not?
F4.77 plt.05
F9.39 plt.01
37Does the IPCI differentiate children who vary in
levels of social-emotional problem concerns as
measured by the BITSEA?
78.08
56.68
77.08
63.26
F11.7 plt.001
25.32
F5.76 plt.05
10.19
F5.67 plt.05
38Does the IPCI differentiate children who vary in
levels of social-emotional problem concerns as
measured by the BITSEA?
7.86
2.32
34.86
F2.17 plt01
13.21
F2.08 plt.05
39Psychometric Summary
- Average training time to achieve adequate
inter-rater reliability was 2 2-hour training
sessions. - Acceptable Inter-rater reliability and stability
(test-retest) was demonstrated. - Support was shown for concurrent validity of IPCI
parent facilitating behavior through expected
significant correlations with the HOME and the
AAPI-2. - Support was shown for concurrent validity of the
IPCI parent interrupting items through expected
significant correlations with the HOME, AAPI-2,
CESD - The IPCI showed sensitivity to parents who differ
in quality of parent styles and children who
differ in social-emotional functioning
40Contact Information
- Kathleen Baggett
- kbaggett_at_ku.edu
- Judith Carta
- carta_at_ku.edu
- IGDI website http//www.igdi.ku.edu/