2018
DOI: 10.1177/0040059918775057
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Peer-Mediated Intervention: Enhancing the Social Conversational Skills of Adolescents With Autism Spectrum Disorder

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Cited by 7 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Given the increasing number of young adults with IDD pursuing degrees, certificates, and/or participating in 18-21 transition programs on university campuses (Elias & White, 2018;Grigal et al, 2018), additional peer-mediated intervention research is needed for older learners. The existing peer-mediated intervention research for secondary students indicates positive findings (Bambara et al, 2016(Bambara et al, , 2021(Bambara et al, , 2018b; however, more research in postsecondary settings is needed to strengthen the evidence base. We evaluated the effects of structured or natural peer-mediated interventions on the conversation skills of young adults with IDD who were on a university campus as part of their enrollment in an 18-21 transition program.…”
Section: Rationale For the Two Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Given the increasing number of young adults with IDD pursuing degrees, certificates, and/or participating in 18-21 transition programs on university campuses (Elias & White, 2018;Grigal et al, 2018), additional peer-mediated intervention research is needed for older learners. The existing peer-mediated intervention research for secondary students indicates positive findings (Bambara et al, 2016(Bambara et al, , 2021(Bambara et al, , 2018b; however, more research in postsecondary settings is needed to strengthen the evidence base. We evaluated the effects of structured or natural peer-mediated interventions on the conversation skills of young adults with IDD who were on a university campus as part of their enrollment in an 18-21 transition program.…”
Section: Rationale For the Two Experimentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For students with ASD who also need communication supports, using activity schedules as a type of shared material between the peers can promote communication (Hart Barnett, Trillo, & More, 2018). The incorporation of a social script may benefit students with ASD who have difficulties initiating conversation and have higher levels of reading comprehension (Bambara, Thomas, Chovanes, & Cole, 2018; see Figure 4). In addition, visual supports in the form of pictures, photographs, or symbols can be used with students who do not have high levels of reading comprehension.…”
Section: Mrs Yaught Recommends That Mrmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Create opportunities for success by training and role modeling with the math helpmate regarding how to request information and commence math activities, comment and ask questions, direct and prompt math interactions, and reinforce math solutions with his math partner. Math helpmates need to know how to be responsive an encourage conversations (Bambara, Thomas, Chovanes, & Cole, 2018). Accommodating training strategies may include pictorially based stories, visual scripts, activity schedules, peer journals, sequence strips, puppets, role-modeling videos, or visual cues using digital photos.…”
Section: Teachers' Supporting Rolementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using visual schedules with drawings, photos, and words during training can give the child a concrete idea of what will happen next (Brillante, 2017). Visual supports should be individualized to support the target math skill and also match the child's capabilities (Bambara, Thomas, Chovanes, & Cole, 2018). There are a variety of developmentally appropriate formats for young children including cue cards, communication books, and tablets.…”
Section: Teachers' Supporting Rolementioning
confidence: 99%