Beyond diagnosis: the relevance of social interactions for participation in inclusive preschool settings

Ana Isabel Pinto, Catarina Grande, Vera Coelho, Susana Castro, Mats Granlund, Eva Bjork-Akesson

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Abstract

This study aims to explore the role of three specific factors within the child-environment interaction process - engagement, independence and social interactions - in influencing development and learning of children with disabilities in inclusive preschool settings. The main question is whether children can be categorized in homogenous groups based on engagement, independence and social interactions (proximal variables within a biopsychosocial framework of human development). The study also examined whether children with the same diagnosis would group together or separately, when trying to identify clusters of engagement, independence and social interactions, and additionally whether such clusters vary as a function of individual child characteristics, and/or as a function of structural and process characteristics of preschool environment. Data was taken from an intervention study conducted in mainstream preschools in Portugal. A person-centred cluster analysis was conducted to explore group membership of children with various diagnoses, based on their engagement, independence and social interactions profiles. Results show that children clustered based on similarity of engagement, independence and social interactions patterns, rather than on diagnosis. Besides, it was found that quality of peer interaction was the only predictor of cluster membership. These findings support the argument that participation profiles may be more informative for intervention purposes than diagnostic categories, and that an aspect of preschool process quality, namely peer interactions, is crucial for children’s participation.


© 2018, Taylor & Francis. The attached document (embargoed until 05/10/2019) is an author produced version of a paper published in Developmental Neurorehabilitation uploaded in accordance with the publisher’s self- archiving policy. The final published version (version of record) is available online at the link below. Some minor differences between this version and the final published version may remain. We suggest you refer to the final published version should you wish to cite from it.
Original languageEnglish
JournalDevelopmental Neurorehabilitation
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Oct 2018

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