학술논문

Examining the Effects of a Brief, Group-Based Motivational Implementation Strategy on Mechanisms of Teacher Behavior Change
Document Type
Reports - Research
Source
Grantee Submission. 2021.
Subject
Elementary School Teachers
Behavior Change
Teacher Behavior
Group Activities
Beliefs
Teacher Attitudes
Game Based Learning
Norms
Intention
Teacher Motivation
Language
English
Abstract
Training and consultation are core implementation strategies used to support the adoption and delivery of evidence-based prevention programs (EBPP), but are often insufficient alone to effect teacher behavior change. Group-based motivational interviewing (MI) and related behavior change techniques (BCTS; e.g., strategic education, social influence, implementation planning) offer promising adjuncts to training and consultation to improve EBPP implementation. Beliefs and Attitudes for Successful Implementation in Schools for Teachers (BASIS-T) is a theoretically-informed, group-based, motivational implementation strategy delivered prior to and immediately after EBPP training. The purpose of this study was to examine the proximal effects of BASIS-T on hypothesized mechanisms of behavior change (e.g., attitudes, subjective norms, intentions to implement) in the context of teachers receiving training and consultation for the Good Behavior Game. As part of a pilot trial, 83 elementary school teachers from 9 public elementary schools were randomly assigned to a BASIS-T (n = 44) or active comparison control (n = 39) condition, with both conditions receiving GBG training and consultation. Theorized mechanisms of behavior change were assessed at baseline and immediately post-training to examine the proximal effects of BASIS-T. A series of mixed effects models revealed meaningful effects favoring BASIS-T on a number of hypothesized mechanisms of behavior change leading to increased motivation to implement GBG. The implications, limitations, and directions for future research on the use of group-based MI and other BCTs to increase the yield of training and consultation are discussed. [This paper was published in "Prevention Science" v22 p722-736 2021.]